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Pomona College
Bulletin
ANNUAL REGISTER
ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARy
GENEALOGY
979.40E
C54PCB,
1914-1919
Vol. XI MARCH. 1914 No. 2
CLAREMONT. CAUFORNIA
Published Bimonthly by Pomona College
Entered at the Po^-office, Claremont, California, as Second-Class Matter
POMONA COLLEGE
LOCATION
Pomona College is located at Olaremont, California, on
the main line of the Santa Fe Railway, 35 miles from Los
Angeles. Pomona is about four miles distant on the South-
ern Pacific and Salt Lake Railways, and is connected with
Claremont by the Pacific Electric Railway.
OORRESPONDENCE
Claremont, California, is the post-oflice address for all
mail intended for those connected with Pomona College.
General correspondence should be directed to the Presi-
dent or Pomona College.
Special correspondence regarding the admission or stand-
ing of students should be directed to the Registrar.
ANNOUNCEMENT
Following this register of officers, faculty, and students
there will be issued in May the Bulletin containing the re-
quirements for admission, the description of courses, general
information, and announcements for the year 1914-1915.
Twenty-sixth Year
Pomona College
ANNUAL REGISTER
of the officers, teachers and students
of Pomona College in 1913-1914
Claremont, California
Published by the College
1914
FEB 17 1926
0^ ^ fic G-eCxY^
College Calendar
1914
February 5 Thursday
March 27 Friday
April 7 Tuesday
May 30 Saturday
June U Thursday
June 8 Monday
June 9 Ttiesday
June 10 Wednesday
June 11 Thiirsday
June 12 Friday
June 13 Saturday
June IJf Sunday
June 15 Monday
June 16 Tuesday
June 16 Tuesday
June 17 Wednesday
June 17 Wednesday
Registration Day for Second
Semester.
Spring Recess begins, 11:30 a. m.
Spring Recess ends, 11:30 a. m.
Memorial Day.
Last day for choice of studies for
the following semester.
Final Examinations.
Baccalaureate Sermon, 10 a. m.
Annual Address before the Chris-
tian Associations of the College,
7:30 p. m.
Dole Prize Debate, 3 p. m.
Senior Class Play, 8 p. m.
Class Day.
Annual Meeting of the Board of
Trustees.
Annual Exhibit of the School of
Art and Design.
Commencement Exercises, 10 a. m.
Informal Addresses, 2 p. m.
Annual Meeting of Alumni, 3:30
p. m.
Alumni Banquet, 7 p. m.
4 POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
Board of Trustees
George W. Marston, San Diego
President
Et. Rev. Joseph H. Johnson, D.D., Los Angeles
Vice-President
Rev. Charles B. Sumner, LL.D., Claremont
Secretary
Charles E. Walker, Pomona
Treasurer
Term of Office Expires, June, 1914
James A. Blaisdell, D. D., Claremont
Charles E. Harwood, Upland
Rev. Charles B. Sumner, LL.D., Claremont
W. H. R. "Weldon, South Pasadena
Fred M. Wilcox, Lamanda Park
Term of OflEice Expires, June, 1915
Nathan W. Blanchard, Santa Paula
Eli p. Clark, Los Angeles
John Fleming, San Diego
George W. Marston, San Diego
Allen P. Nichols, Pomona
Term of Office Expires, June, 1916
George H. Bixby, Long Beach
Rev. Frank M. Dowling, Anaheim
Rt. Rev. Joseph H. Johnson, D.D., Los Angeles
Frederick W. Lyman, Pasadena
Butler A. Woodford, Claremont
Term of Office Expires, June, 1917
Charles C. Chapman, Fullerton
Edw^in F. Hahn, Pasadena
Stephen H. Herrick, Riverside
Seeley W. Mudd, Losi Angeles
Charles E. Walker, Pomona
REGISTER
Term of Office Expires, June, 1918
Llewellyn Bixby, Long Beach
Rev. AVilllvm Horace Day, D.D., Los Angeles
Arthur M. Dole, Pomona
Rev. Henry Kingman, D.D., Claremont
Willlvm S. Mason, Evanston, 111.
Rev. Edward F. Gofp, Claremont
Business Manager
Allen P. Nichols, Pomona
Auditor
Committees of the Board
Executive Committee
James A. Blaisdell, Chairman
Charles B. Sumner, Secretary
Charles E. HLvrwood
Charles E. Walker
Arthur M. Dole
Butler A. Woodford
Fred M. Wilcox
Finance Committee
Charles E. Walker
George W. Marston
George H. Bixby
James A. Blaisdell
Charles B. Sumner
ComTTiittee on Instruction
James A. Blaisdell
Edwin F. Hahn
William H. Day
Committee on Buildings and Grounds^
Charles B. Sumner
George W. Marston
1 In conjunction with a committee of the Faculty.
6 POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
Faculty
James Arnold Blaisdell, M.A., D.D. 339 College Ave.
President
Edwin Clarence Norton, Ph.D., D.D. 137 w. Seventh St.
Professor oj the Greek Language and Literature on the Edwin
Clarence Norton Foundation and Dean of the College
Frank Parkhurst Brackett, M.A. 270 Third St.
Professor of Mathematics on the Joseph M. Fiske Foundation
and Director of the Observatory
Phebe Estelle Spalding, Ph.D. 261 w. Fifth St.
Professor of English Literature on the Phebe Estelle Spalding
Foundation
Daniel Herbert Colcord, M.A. 157 B. Seventh St.
Professor of the Latin Language and Literature
Arthur Dart Bissell, M.A. 161 w. Sixth St.
Professor of the German Language and Literature
George Gale Hitchcock, B.A. 2 36 College Ave.
Professor of Physics
Albert John Cook, D.Sc. Sacramento
Emeritus Professor of Biology
George Stedman Sumner, Ph.D. 105 College Ave.
Professor of Economics and Sociology on the
Stedman- Sumner Foundation
Charles Cummings Stearns, M.A. 146 E. Tenth St.
Projessor of Biblical History and Literature on the
Nancy M. Lyon Foundation
REGISTER 7
Grace Ella Berry, M.A. Sumner Hall
Dean of Women and Assistant Professor of Mathematics
James Alexander Lyman, Ph.D. 833 Indian Hill Blvd.
Professor of Chemistry
]\Iendal Garbutt Frampton, M.A. 9 27 Harvard Ave.
Professor of the English Language and Acting Registrar
Francis Harding White, Ph.D. 140 e. Third St.
Professor of History
Charles Gracchus Neely, B.L. 1122 College Ave.
Professor of Constitutional History and Law
AYiLLiAM Atwood Hilton, Ph.D. 240 w. Sixth St.
Professor of Zoology
Fred Albert Bacon 4 25 Harvard Ave.
Professor of Applied Music and Instructor in Singing
Robert Day "Williams, Ph.D. 12 63 Dartmouth Ave.
Professor of Psychology and Education
Milton Erastus Churchill, Litt. D. 507 Yale Ave.
Associate Professor of German and Secretary of the Faculty
AYilliam Polk Russell, ^M.A. 506 e. sixth St.
Associate Professor of Mathematics
Maro Beath Jones, B.A. Rose Court Apartments
Associate Professor of Romance Languages
Willis Allen Parker, Ph. D. 545 Indian Hill Blvd.
Associate Professor of Philosophy
1 Absent on leave, first semester, 1913-1914.
8 POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
Hannah Tempest Jenkins Claremont Inn
Assistant Professor of Art and Design
Robert Tresilian Belcher, B.A. 169 w. Sixth St.
Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Engineering
Arthur Volney Stoughton, M.D. W. Seventh St.
Assistant Professor of Physiology and Hygiene
Walter Alfred Allen, B.A. Claremont Inn
Assistant Professor of Musical Theory and Appreciation and
Instructor in Organ
Eugene Schofield Heath, M.A. 230 Harvard Ave.
Assistant Professor of Botany
"William Layton Stanton, B.A. Glendora
Physical Director for Men
Laura Charlton Squire, 'B.A. 24 8 w. Seventh St.
Physical Director for Women
Victor Edward Marriott, B.A. 231 w. Sixth St.
Acting Librarian
Mable Clair West, B.S. 10 16 Columbia Ave.
Instructor in Piano
Robert Martin Staples 338 Dartmouth Ave.
Instructor in Violin
Bess Viola Daniels, B.Mus. 132 e. Second St.
Instructor in Piano and History of Music
Alfred Smith, ®M.A. Claremont Inn
Instructor in Chemistry
1 Absent on leave, 1913-1914.
s Resigned at close of first semester.
REGISTER 9
AViLLiAM Sheffield Ament, B.A. w. Sixth St.
Instructor in English
Harold Rozell Bruce, B.A. M3 Smiley Hall
Instructor in Public Address
Frances Benton Clapp, B.A. 125 w. Seventh St.
Instructor in Musical Theory and Appreciation and Piano
Irving Otis Pecker, B.A. Claremont inn
Instructor in Romance Languages
Edna Lee Roof, B.L, 407 Harvard Ave.
Instructor in Physical Culture for Women
Mrs. Harry Dow Kirk 6 28 Dartmouth Ave.
Instructor in Voice
William Holland JMatlock, B.Ph. 306 College Ave.
Instructor in German
Edward Logan Campbell, B.A. M3 Smiley Hall
Assistant in Chemistry
Persis Ethel Geier, B.A. 339 College Ave.
Assistant in Mathematics
Mary Stoddard Roof, B. A. 407 Harvard Ave.
Assistant Instructor in Physical Education for Women
George Herbert Palmer, Litt. D., LL. D.
Alford Professor of Natural Religion, Moral Philosophy
and Civic Polity, Emeritus, in Harvard
University, Lecturer on Ethics
Rev. Philip Smead Bird, B. A. Claremont Inn
Assistant Pastor of the Claremont Church
Lecturer on Biblical Literature
10 POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
Administrative Officers of the Faculty and Other Officers
James Arnold Blaisdell, D.D.
President's Rooms, Library
President
Edwin Clarence Norton, Ph.D. Dean's Office, Library
Dean
Grace Ella Berry, M.A. Sumner Hall
Dean of Women
Milton Erastus Churchill, Litt. D.
Secretary's Office, Room 5 2, Library
Secretary of the Faculty
Frank Parkhurst Brackett, M.A. Tbe Observatory
Director of the Observatory
Mendal Garbutt Frampton, M.A.
Registrar's Office, Holmes Hall
Acting Registrar
Victor Edward Marriott, B.A. Library
Acting Librarian and Secretary to the President
Mary Louise Atsatt, B.A. Holmes Hall
Assistant Registrar
Persis Ethel Geier, B.A. Library
Assistant Secretary
Marion Jeannette Ewing,B-A-j B.S. 125 w. Seventh St.
Assistant Librarian
Edward Fade Goff 338 Harvard Ave.
Business Manager
REGISTER • 11
Ernest Everett Jones, B.S. 13 6 e. Ninth St.
Assistant Business Manager and Business Manager of
Student Activities
Allen P. Nichols Pomona
Auditor
Byrde Iva Eustis, B.S. Claremont Inn
Cashier
]\Iary Louise Billings 541 Harvard Ave.
General Office Secretary
Sarah Louise Jewell Sumner Hall
Matron of Sumner Hall
Forest Glenn Hutchison
Superintendent of Grounds
Carl Mauritz Carlson 327 Dartmouth Ave.
Superintendent of Buildings
Advisers and Assistants
For Men, Professor Neely.
For the Senior Class, Professors Brackett and Williams.
For the Junior Class, Professors Colcord and Bissell.
For the Sophomore Class, Professors Sumner and Stearns.
For the Freshman Class, Professors Parker and Berry;
Messrs. Marriott and Ament.
For the Department of Music, Professor Bacon.
For the Department of Art and Design, Mrs. Jenkins.
12 ' POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
Standing Committees for 1913-1914
WITH PLACE AND TIME OF MEETING
Athletics — Messrs, Williams, Russell, Stanton, Ament,
Miss Roof. Room 18, first Thursday, 2 p. m.
Buildings and Grounds'^ — Messrs. Stearns, Belcher, Heath,
Hitchcock. On call.
Classification — Messrs. Frampton, Colcord, Brackett,
Sumner, Parker, Miss Berry. Registrar's office, Thursday,
4 p. m.
College Life — Messrs. Norton, Colcord, Brackett, Sumner,
Parker, Miss Berry, Messrs. Neely and Churchill. 'Dean's
office, Friday, 3:30 p. m.
Courses of Study — Messrs. Brackett, Sumner, Hilton,
Lyman. Room 51, on call.
Educational Efficiency — Messrs. Norton, Frampton,
Stoughton, Lyman, Neely. Dean's office, Tuesday, 3 p. m.
(on call).
Faculty Meetings — Messrs. White, Bissell, Jones. Faculty
room, on call.
Graduate Work — Mr. Lyman, Miss Spalding, Messrs. Bis-
sell, Sumner. Room 57, Thursday, 2 p. m. (on call).
Library — Miss Spalding, Messrs. Marriott, Stoughton,
White, Jones. Room 57, first Monday, 3 p. m.
Publications — Messrs. Churchill, Stearns, Bruce, Heath,
White. Room 5 2, on call.
Public Events and Lectures — Messrs. Churchill, Williams,
Stearns, Bacon. Room 5 2, on call.
Religious Interests — Messrs. Neely, Williams, Matlock,
Miss Berry, Mr. Ament. Faculty room, first Tuesday, 2
p. m. (on call).
1 In conjunction with a committee of the Board of Trustees.
REGISTER 13
Rules — Messrs. Sumner, Frampton, Churchill, Miss Berry.
Room 52, on call.
School of Art and Design —Mrs. Jenkins, Mr. Colcord,
Miss Spalding, Mr. Belcher. Room 14, 4 p. m., on call.
School of Music — Messrs. Bacon, Bissell, Allen, Colcord.
Faculty room, on call.
Social Affairs — Miss Berry, Mr. Churchill.
Student Aid and Labor — Messrs. Russell, White, Norton,
Miss Berry, Miss Roof. Room 2, on call.
Suvimer School — Messrs. Bissell, White, Jones, Hilton.
Room 5, on call.
OfKcs Hours
The President — President's Rooms, Library
11 to 11:30 a. m. and 1:30 to 2:30 p. m., daily
The Dean — Dean's Office, Library
9 to 9:30 a. m., Monday, Tuesday and Thursday
3 to 3:30 p. m., Wednesday and Friday
The Dean of Women — Sumner Hall
7:30 to 8:15 a. m., 'ihursday and Saturday
1 to 2:30 p. m., Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and
Friday
The Secretary — Secretary's Office, Room 52, Library
9 to 11:30 a. m. and 2 to 4 p. m., except Thursday
and Saturday
The Registrar — Registrar's Office, Holmes Hall
1:30 to 2 p. m. Monday; 10 to 10:30 a. m., Tues-
day; 3:30 to 4 p. m., Thursday and Friday
The Assistant Registrar — Registrar's Office, Holmes Hall
9 to 11:30 a. m., daily, and 1:30 to 4 p. m., daily
except Saturday
The Secretary to the President, Room 54, Library
8:30 to 11:30 a. m. and 1 to 4 p. m., daily
The General Office Secretary, General Office, Library
9 to 12 a. m. and 1 to 4 p. m., daily
14 POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
The General Adviser for Men — Room 9, Holmes Hall
9:30 to 11:30 a. m., Tuesday, Thursday and Satur-
day; 10:30 to 11:30 a. m., Wednesday and Friday;
2 to 3 p. m., Thursday; 4 to 5 p. m., Monday
Class Advisers —
Senior Class — Professor Brackett, Room 51, 1:3.0 to
2:30 p. m., Monday; 10:30 to 11:30 a. m., Tuesday
and Thursday
Junior Class — Professor Colcord, 7:30 a. m., Wed-
nesday and Friday; 9:30 to 10 a. m., Tuesday, Thurs-
day and Saturday
Sophomore Class — Professor Sumner, Room 14,
Holmes Hall, 8 a. m., Tuesday and Thursday; 9:30
a. m., Monday; 12:50 p. m., Friday
Freshman Class — Professor Parker, Room 5 8, 2 to
. 3 p. m., Thursday; 8:30 to 9:30 a. m., Tuesday and
Saturday
The Assistant Business Manager — Business Office, Pearsons
Hall
10 to 11:30 a. m., daily, and usually 1:30 to 3:30
p. m., except Saturday
The Cashier — Business Office, Pearsons Hall
9 to 11:30 a. m., daily, and 1 to 4 p. m., except Sat-
urday; 1 to 3 p. m., Saturday
The Director of the Observatory — The Observatory
7:30 p. m., Monday, Tuesday and Friday.
The Librarian — 8:30 to 11:30 a. m. and 1 to 4 p. m., daily
The Library- — Open every week day, except Thursday,
from 7:30 a. m. to 10 p. m., with the exception of two
periods, 11:30 a. m. to 12 m. and 6 to 7 p. m.; open Thurs-
day from 7:30 a. m. to 10 p. m., with the exception of two
periods, 1 to 2 p. m. and 6 to 7 p. m. ; open Sunday from 1
to 5 p. m.
The Observatory — Open to visitors, 7:30 p. m. the first
Thursday of each month.
REGISTER 15
Students
The register of students is made up at the beginning of the
second semester.
Freshman standing is then given to those who have the full
number of recommended entrance units, and who have carried the
woik of the first semester satisfactorily. Sophomore standing is
given to those who have completed thirty- two hours of college
work with a total of not less than twenty- four credits, provided no
entrance conditions stand against them. Junior standing is given
to those who have completed sixty-four hours of college work with
a total of not less than fifty-four credits. Senior standing is given
to those who have completed ninety-four hours of college work
with a total of not less than eighty-seven credits.
The standing of students enrolled for less than one semester is
provisional.
GRADUATE STUDENTS *
Gertrude Auld Bacon Claremont
B. A., Pomona College
Graduate Fellow in Zoology
William Sheffield Anient Claremont
B. A., Oberlin College
Delia Churchill Claremont
B. A., Pomona College
Jesse Winegar Hough Claremont
B. S., Pomona College
M. F., Yale University
Ernest Everett Jones Claremont
B. S., Pomona College
Lois Adele Lockwood Claremont
B. L., Pomona College
Lloyd Louis Lorbeer Claremont
B. S., Pomona College
Edna Lee Roof . .Claremont
B. L., Pomona College
Mary Stoddard Roof Claremont
B. A., Pomona College
Jane Elvira Sayer Claremont
B. A., Pomona College
Elizabeth Claire Utt Claremont
B. A. Pomona College
16 POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
SENIOR CLASS
Paul Adams Pomona
Bertha Harding Allen Pasadena
George Henderson Ash San Diego
Eunice Atkinson Los Angeles
Edward Crane Bangs Santa Ana
Henry William Berg Reedley
Harry Alonzo Brandt Lordsburg
Voyle Ellsworth Brennen Los Angeles
Ruth Bullock Redlands
Holland Field Burr Pomona
Ralph Dalton Cornell Long Beach
Sarah Avis Crook Covina
Harold Welding Daniels Claremont
Kenneth Glendower Darling Claremont
Paul Armstrong Davies Los Angeles
Helen Nina Davis Pomona
Freeman Morgan Eakin Claremont
Fred Newton Edwards Whittier
Anna Lucile Elliott Pomona
Elizabeth Augusta Foss Los Angeles
Donald Frederic Fox Pasadena
Eleanor Frater Pomona
Marie Main Frost Redlands
Ray Earl Gardner Claremont
Ralph Emerson Gibson Escondido
Lawrence Birney Gillette Claremont
Albert Howard Hankey Santa Ana
Edith Marguerite Hitchcock. . Claremont
Winifred Rachel Hogan Lancaster
Katharine Alma Hoskins Claremont
William Jewett Howard Whittier
Josephine Elizabeth Jacks Batavia, N. Y.
Warren Benaiah James Redlands
Ralph William Jesson Ontario
Marion Johnston Claremont
Hugh Toland Jones Pomona
REGISTER 1 7
Harry Lees Kingman Claremont
Clara Petronella Kommers National City
Katharine Loney Llewellyn Pomona
Mary Edna Lochridge Claremont
George Coe Lorbeer Claremont
Sarah Elizabeth Lorbeer Pomona
Vera Helen Lorbeer Claremont
Mildred Mansur Santa Ana
Elsie May McConnell Claremont
Edwin Thomas McFadden Santa Ana
Edith Elizabeth McGee Whittier
Addie Lula Miller Pomona
Helyn Belle Miller Lordsburg
Mildred Katherine Murphy Pasadena
Esther Marie Nielsen Monrovia
Anna Marie Norris Los Angeles
Margaret Painter Glendora
Stuart Luther Peck Claremont
Ruth Catharina Peterson Pomona
James Tank Porter La Mesa
Nelle Marie Remsburg Santa Ana
Theodore Johnson Rice Pomona
Harold Joy Ryan San Diego
Estella Marguerite Seaver Pomona
Mary Ellen Shrode Monrovia
Reatha Avis Smith Claremont
John Whiteley Snyder San Diego
Catherine Eraser Snell El Monte
Roy Elmer St. Clair Lordsburg
Alberta Tomlinson Claremont
Charles Hiram Ward San Dimas
Earl Henry Weed Claremont
George Fernando Weinland Banning
Henry Newton Wolcott Tombstone, Ariz.
18 POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
JUNIOR CLASS
Harriet Ellen Allisoni Santa Ana
Wilma Andrews Santa Ana
George Babcock Pomona
Gladys Vivian Banks San Dimas
Edna Anne Beatty Santa Ana
Mary Frances Beck National City
Ella Alden Bennett Redlands
William Hubert Bentley Pasadena
Francene Lewise Bishop Long Beach
Paul Carrier Blaisdell Claremont
Ernest Wilton Bougher San Diego
Ira Delbert Gate Long Beach
William Perkins Channon Oberlin, O.
Mayme Ethel Church Pomona
Hugh Lathrop Clary Regina, Can.
Alice Margaret Clausen Santa Ana
Lois Mildred Clency Claremont
Prank Cogswell Pomona
Hazel Augusta Converse Claremont
Loyd Otterman Cooper Burbank
Claude Craft Elsinore
Bula Huntington Culver Long Beach
Paul Rodney Daggs Claremont
Helen Brown de Camp Claremont
Irene Thorburn de Camp Claremont
John Baker Durkee San Dimas
Ruth Eakin Claremont
Alma Emelie Edgar Claremont
Muriel Dana Emerson San Diego
Francis Charles Flint Long Beach
Gladys Hamilton Detroit, Mich.
Mary Hazel Hamilton Pasadena
Colvin Heath Pomona
Hallie Violet Hess Upland
1 Entered in second semester.
REGISTER 19
Helen Winifred Hill Lime Springs, Iowa
Ernest Gockley Hoff Maywood, 111.
Florence Twitchell Holme Los Angeles
Florence Wlieat Hoover Claremont
Ella Rice Hopkins Tulare
Grace Alice Hoskins Pasadena
William Ewart Hudson Alhambra
Helen Harmon Humphrey Claremont
Frieda Johanna Iselin Banning
Ralph Patterson James Redlands
Hester Jewell San Dimas
Julia Martha Kingsbury Hemet
Rollin Jerome LaFollette Highland
Edwin Munderloh Landale Omaha, Nebr.
Edith Winifred Lee Pomona
Robert Parker Little ^ Columbus, Ohio
Mabel Frances Loop Los Angeles
Edward Payson Marsh Claremont
Frances Havergal Marsh Escondido
Emma Ruth Matheson Glendora
Helen Marguerite Mcllvried Pomona
William Gammon Metz Sheridan, Wyo.
Ruth Eleanor Milliken Claremont
Margaret Lyons Moles Claremont
Charlotte Neely Claremont
Courtenay Stuyvesant Overin Los Angeles
Amy Pefley Claremont
Byron Stevens Phillips Pasadena
Nettie Elsey Pike Long Beach
Archie Goodrich Postlethwait Corry, Pa.
Valentine Johnson Powelson Tacoma, Wash.
Ethel Irene Prosser Pasadena
Ellen Queen San Bernardino
Walter Seaton Reeves Santa Ana
Hero Excelsior Rensch Pasadena
.1 Entered in second semester.
20 POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
Adah Rogers Pomona
Barbara Stevens Sanford Claremont
Queenie Santikian Fowler
Ellis Savory Claremont
Joela Sharp Santa Ana
Marian Easter Skinner San Bernardino
Helen Whipple Smith Pomona
Herbert Spoor Redlands
Arthur Percival Stembridge Pomona
Roy Abies Stewart San Bernardino
Ruth Walker Pomona
Chi Tsau Wang Soochow, China
Nannie Evelyn Weed Claremont
Carl Irving Wheat Los Angeles
Margaret Dorothy Wilcox Lamanda Park
Harold Richards Wilson Inglewood
Mary Lillian Woodford Claremont
Velma Elizabeth Woodworth Claremont
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Those whose names appear in the second list have not
as yet matriculated. ^
Constance Abbott Claremont
Julia Lillias Andrews Upland
Dolly Hathaway Bair Croswell, Mich.
Augusta Elizabeth Berg San Diego
Susie Jeanette Billington Upland
James Brooks Blaisdell Claremont
Helen Lucille Brayton Long Beach
Hazel Brewer Pomona
Gertie Hazel Bristol Claremont
Hazel Geraldine Burnham San Diego
Harold John Burt Upland
Margery Carpenter Hemet
Hazen Graves Chamberlin Ischua, N. Y.
1 Students are matriculated only after they have come into full
standine;.
REGISTER 21
Florence Chase Alhambra
Chinghan Chen Canton, China
Jesse Ludowick Cobb Tulare
Wilbur Kirkpatrick Cobb Tulare
Caroline Whitehouse Coleman Pasadena
Helena Frances Curtiss Lordsburg
Edna Laura Daniels Chino
Frederick William Davies Los Angeles
John Carey Dement, Jr San Diego
Lorna William De Vana Fellows
Juliet Dixon Hanford
Sophie Lois Doane San Diego
Alfred Woodward Dodge Santa Barbara
Ruth Olive Douglas East Auburn
Emma Mary Freeman Pasadena
Mae Margaret Freeman Upland
Leon Lloyd Gardner Claremont
Clarence Sherman Gillett Claremont
Edythe Alice i^raves Whittier
Marjorie Elizabeth Griffin Whittier
Georgia Haffner Ocean Park
Frank Monroe Hall El Monte
William Ferguson Hamilton Orosi
Edith Helen Hartley Upland
Clarence Hield Armada
Anna Ruby Hoffman Santa Monica
Myra Hoge Pasadena
Margaret Sweet Hookway Pasadena
Pauline Christine Jahraus Laguna Beach
Mildred Lavinia Jones Salt Lake City, Utah
Lesly Boyd King Covina
Olive Kuntz Pomona
Helen Anna Lane Pomona
Eleanor Allen Lee Claremont
Paul Adolph Lichti Cucamonga
Jean Frederic Loba, Jr Ontario
Lydia Mangold Woodland
2 2 POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
Fay Clark Marchant San Dimas
Anna Martin Claremont
John Lamont McFadden Santa Ana
Mary Ruth McLaughlin South Pasadena
Mar jorie Ada McNees Whittier
Lillian Lucile McQuown Porterville
J D Mehl Upland
Glen Jewett Merritt South Pasadena
Lewis Allen Myers Whittier
Wesley Lee Paul Glendale
Ruth Jeanette Powell Los Angeles
George Emmett Raitt Porterville
Esther Marie Riesen Pomona
Mary Alice Sharps Upland
Charlotte Shoemaker Pasadena
Vesta Marie Slaughter Pomona
Delia Sloan San Bernardino
Catherine Smiley Orange
Gretchen Virginia Smith Pomona
Marcia Clarice Spear Monrovia
Joseph Robert Sperl Pomona
Rowena Taylor Claremont
Chester Noyes Thompson Highland
Floy Rita Vaughan Claremont
Louise Walker Pomona
Dorothea Webster San Diego
Arthur Fairchild White Claremont
Mary Cordelia White San Dimas
Ruth Marie Wilkins Claremont
Clara Malvina Williams Porterville
Gladys Wilson Pomona
Mar jorie Burton Woodford Claremont
Frances Yeomans Long Beach
Elmer Becker Pomona
Walter Bishop Santee
John Parsons Campbell San Dimas
REGISTER 23
Erma Lucile Chamberlin Long Beach
Theodore Hamilton Coke Downey
Fred Austin Cox Holtville
Nat Marshall Fox San Diego
Paul Nathaniel Fox Pomona
Bernice Katherine Franklin Carpinteria
Henry Ross Greeley Balboa
Sadie Adele Griffin Pomona
Allen Franklin Hawley San Diego
Darley Frank Howe Chula Vista
Earl Hubbard Johnson Ontario
Erwin Julius Kintzi Upland
George Gaylord Kirkpatrick Pomona
Carl Clifton Mead Claremont
Ethel May Moorehouse Claremont
Vinal Charlotte Palmer Claremont
Ada May Ranney Fullerton
Smith Lafayette Russell Claremont
Elma Clara Schowalter Upland
Mary Margaret Seeley Covina
Hazel Dell Shallenberger Santa Ana
Katherine Virginia Sinks San Diego
Alice Maybelle Stafford Corona
Katherine Stein *. Long Beach
Harold Smith Stewart Upland
David Sturges Claremont
Andrew Acker Sugg Claremont
Ray Trussell, Jr Escondido
Ralph Ramsey Vawter Santa Ana
Frank Marion Watenpaugh Ontario
Glenn Baird Wilkins Claremont
Marguerite Young Claremont
Harold Ramsey Youngman Los Angeles
24 POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
FRESHMAN CLASS
All members of the Freshman class are admitted on
probation; those whose names appear in the second list have
not yet matriculated. '
Jean Armstrong Phoenix, Ariz.
Jessie Gladys Bailard Carpinteria
Walter Edward Baker Ceres
Henry Reavis Barcus Pomona
Lina May Bartholomew Pomona
Mary Faye Beaty Paso Robles
William Samuel Belden Alta Loma
Wayne LeRoy Bell Perris
Donald Roy Bishop Pomona
Ada Alberta Black Santa Ana
Lucy Blackwelli San Dimas
Henry Levi Bray Taf t
Marie Geraldine Brillhart San Fernando
Alice Elizabeth Brown Wyoming, 111.
Harold Delbert Brown El Monte
Winifred Estelle Bullock Rivera
Ruby Catherine Campbell Orange
Mary Ruth Carothers Pomona
Margaret Cate Florence
Ruth Caroline Chamberlin Ischua, N. Y.
Elmer Shryack Clark Claremont
Idella Valerie Coleman Pomona
Harriet Mosher Coman Covina
Elmo Hanford Conley El Centro
Ruth Marie Craig Pomona
Alice Beulah Cranston Santa Ana
Harold Enos Crowe Long Beach
Winifred Culp Escondido
Albert Neil Dangerfield Riverside
John Murray Davison Arlington
1 Students are matriculated only after they have come into full
standing.
REGISTER 25
Mabel Clair Day Claremont
Cecil Ditty Pomona
Florence Mildred Dodge Hanford
Rachel Cornelia Doud Pomona
Paul McLean Dowling Placentia
Louise Mabel Drake Pomona
Marion Elizabeth Drown Nordhoff
Ruth Emily Epling Lordsburg
Margaret Edith Faires Claremont
Bruce Allyn Findlay Los Angeles
Ruth Fountain Banning
Rachel Sarah Fryer Pasadena
Stella Gammon Pasadena
Vera Gammon Pasadena
Carroll Eugene Genung Pomona
Edmund Sheldon Gerry Ventura
Allison Bryce Given Covina
Helena May Goodale Anaheim
William Marshall Greathouse Santa Ana
George William Green Long Beach
Edward Tisdale Gushee Ontario
Frederick Hastings Claremont
Helen Felicitas Haury Upland
Harold Coy Haymond Pasadena
Otis Townsend Hiatt Ceres
Gladys Elaine Hohl Ontario
Nan Elizabeth Houghton Rivera
Edna Esther Ingels Fresno
Mar jorie Rood Kennedy Pomona
Leo Joseph Klotz Carleton, Mich.
Helen Hunt Leavitt Minneapolis, Minn.
John Clark Lewis Riverside
Edna Loftus Whittier
Orpha Florence Lorbeer Claremont
John Lomax Love Pomona
Harold Cotton Loveland Pomona
Mabel Mansur Santa Ana
26 POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
Hazel Leone Maurer Los Angeles
Hazel Avis McClees San Dlmas
Effie Chalfant McClure Beardstown, HI.
Clara Belle McConnell Claremont
Callie McCormick Eaton, Colo.
Carrie McCormick Eaton, Colo.
Frank Dole McCulloch Camp Baldy
Helen Camp McDonald Pasadena
Lois Applegate McLaughlin South Pasadena
Gertrude Lucile Milhous Whittier
Lucile Stoner Mount Lordsburg
Dorothy Louise Neely Claremont
Walter Eli Nelson El Monte
Clara Belle Nielsen Monrovia
Eleanor Okell Norwalk
Charles Eddy Orcutt National City
Margaret DeMotte Overholtzer Claremont
Bertha Ellen Pann Huntington Beach
Fawn Leverne Peters Pomona
Lewis Clifford Plush Pomona
Lowell Clark Pratt Pomona
Elsie Ann Randall Whittier
Minor Kelley Reid Banning
Morell Maurice Reynolds South Pasadena
Ralph Waldo Rice Hanford
Anna Belle Robinson Claremont
Zadie Hanna Saecker Bakersfield
Paul Edward Schwab Ontario
Emma Pauline Sears Porterville
Selwyn Jackson Sharp Santa Ana
Katherine Crowell Sharpless Perris
Carl Shepard Compton
Earle Valentine Skinner San Bernardino
Mary Isabel Smiley Orange
Amelia Ora Smith Claremont
Georgia Victoria Smith ^anta Ana
Mabel Ayretta Stanford Claremont
REGISTER 27
Margaret Stover Claremont
Helen Hope Sturges Claremont
Elizabeth Hayden Taylor Ontario
Mabel Louise Tubbs Tustin
Gertrude Agnes Urton Pasadena
Maria Louisa Van Rensselaer Fallbrook
Jerome Bonaparte Walden Claremont
Marion Skinner Warren Covina
Paul Edward Webb Pomona
James David Weinland Banning
Florence Mary Wilson Los Angeles
Florence lone Wilson Artesia
Elsie Katherine Wingood Santa Ana
Lola May Wire Chino
John Dick Young San Bernardino
Ethel Pauline Allen Claremont
Paul Wilton Barton Herman, Minn.
Mary Broughton Bell Claremont
Bernhardt Louis Bergstrom El Monte
Mary Dorcus Butman Whittier
David Robertson Coleman Pasadena
Marie Frances Craig Corydon, Iowa
William Howard Craig Upland
William Harold Cree Claremont
Raymond Morgan Elliott Anaheim
Myrtle Winona Fanning Fresno
Alice Faulks Claremont
Harold Percy Fawkes Newcastle, Wyo.
Gladys Helen Fritz Redondo Beach
Charles Nathen Green Fair Haven, Mo.
Glen Dollard Green Long Beach
Carrie Gladys Grimes Pasadena
Marjorie Harris Pomona
Charles Rupert Hartshorn Holtville
28 POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
Helen Dean Hendrick Azusa
Harry Hield Armada
William Nathaniel Hill La Mesa
Edgar Page Hubble Lordsburg
Graham Herbert Humphrey Escondido
Donald Erwin Ingham Claremont
Eron Anders Johannessen Claremont
John Baxter Jouvenat, Jr Sheridan, Wyo.
Dorothy Blanche Kenyon Long Beach
Robert Loring Keyes Claremont
Barrett Carlisle Kiesling South Pasadena
Paul Mathews Kinney Pomona
Howard Arthur Krause Anaheim
Homer Kryger Claremont
Franklin Blades Lewis Pomona
Murl Anthony Maudlin Los Angeles
Sarah Leah Myers Compton
Faustina Nenno Fullerton
Lydia Olivia Nielsen Los Angeles
Velma Mary Osier Pomona
Hazel Irene Peters Pomona
Harold Ward Pfiffner Pasadena
Hazel Grace Pine Corona
Edward Houghton Prentiss Vancouver, Wash.
Alvin William Pruett Pomona
Vera Rebecca Ranney Fullerton
William Harold Rapson Claremont
Charles Sumner Reynolds Upland
Orrin Warner Robinson Dinuba
Warren Sumner Rogers Los Angeles
Dorothy Ashton Shade Pasadena
Marjorie Isabelle Shaw Claremont
Walter Stafford Santa Ana
Harry Staples Chicago, 111.
Anna Abigail Stewart Claremont
Milton Reynolds Stewart Upland
Walter Eugene Coe Sturges Claremont
REGISTER 29
Monda Louise Taylor El Monte
Susan Gertrude Tracy Claremont
Richard Carlisle Waltz Ontario
SPECIAL STUDENTS
Martha Ackerman Claremont
Lillie Eygabroad Birdsall Pomona
Mabel Cook Pomona
Edith Culter Claremont
Harriet Caswell Dowling Placentia
Hazel Gapp Pomona
Otto Hirschler Upland
Wilhelmina Kent Pomona
Mary Edna Lanyon Ward, S. Dak.
Sadie Alice McCray Los Angeles
Beatrice Nourse Los Angeles
Birdenia Smith Claremont
Mrs. W. L. Stanton Glendora
Sophie Seymour Stearns Claremont
Louise Stover Claremont
Eileen Tubbs Tustin
SUMMARY
Graduate Students 11
Seniors 70
Juniors 87
Sophomores 119
Freshmen 178
Special Students 16
Total 481
30 POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
Degrees, Honors and Prizes
Degrees Conferred in 1913
MASTER OF ARTS
Henry Kittredge Norton, B. K.Dartmouth College, Los Angeles
MASTER OF SCIENCE
Harold Eugene Billings, B. A Claremont
Mabel Guernsey, B. A Corona
BACHELOR OF ARTS
Summa cum Laude
Dorothy Bach South Pasadena
Magna cum Laude
Edward Logan Campbell ban Dimas
Delia Churchill Claremont
Bertha Henrietta Goettsche Pomona
Elsie Reed Hayes Long Beach
Edith Elvira McConnell Claremont
Cum, Laude
Carolyn Annelle Adams Pomona
Alice Anderson Leesburg, O.
Irene Cogswell El Monte
Frank Raymond Cole Redlands
Maurine Elder Elliott Pomona
Persis Ethel Geier Pasadena
Helen Eugenia Hamilton Claremont
Edward William Hauck Claremont
Margaret Metcalf ....,.,....., Claremont
Edith Esther Reynolds t Pasadena
Alice Lucinda Stearns Claremont
Anna Turner Compton
Ruth Alberta Yeomans Long Beach
REGISTER 31
Rite
John Irwin Atkinson Lordsburg
Gertrude Auld Bacon Claremont
Helen Jeanette Bacon Claremont
Lua Eulala Blair El Paso, Texas
William George Brewster Claremont
Katharine Jeanette Caldwell Claremont
Florence Luella Clark Worland.Wyo.
Inez Lillian Crawford Claremont
William Clark Crawford Claremont
Clarence Algernon Durkee San Dimas
Claude Raymond Durrell Chino
Elma Vartouhie Elmayan Pasadena
Flo Allene Gantz Pomona
Eugene Gray Gardner. Ventura
Florence Ethel Hayes Whittier
Minnie Almira Himrod Pomona
Clyde Eugene Holley Claremont
Grace Louise McCleery Moneta
Phoebe Merl McClees Pomona
George Ernest Merritt Claremont
Charles Alfred Perrin Pomona
Lillian N. Reid Long Beach
Ralph James Roth Claremont
John DeRemer Sanford Claremont
Gerhard Edward Schmidt Upland
Vincent William Shutt Claremont
Arthur Eugene St. Clair Lordsburg
Willard Pairan Stover Claremont
Charlotte Josephine Thomas Claremont
Elizabeth Claire Utt Claremont
Howry Haskell Warner Marion, O.
Marguerite Elizabeth West Santa Ana
Florence Amsden Wheeler Los Angeles
Irene Maud Williams Claremont
Alfred Oswald Woodford Claremont
32 POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE
Rite
Louis Edward Flinspach Redlands
Arthur Raymond Payne Claremont
BACHELOR OF MUSIC
Cum Laude
May Gertrude Edwards Whittier
Rite
Elizabeth Margaret Rust South Pasadena
Honors Awarded in 1913
General Honors
SENIOR CLASS
(The numerals I and II denote respectively first and sec-
ond semesters).
Carolyn Annelle Adams I, II
Alice Anderson II
John Irwin Atkinson I, II
Dorothy Bach I, II
Gertrude Auld Bacon I, II
Helen Jeanette Bacon II
Edward Logan Campbell II
Delia Churchill I, II
Irene Cogswell I
Frank Raymond Cole II
William Clark Crawford II
Kenneth Glendower Darling I, II
Clarence Algernon Durkee II
Maurine Elder Elliott II
Elma Vartouhie Elmayan II
Persis Ethel Geier I, II
REGISTER 33
Bertha Henrietta Goettsche I, II
Helen Eugenia Hamilton I, II
Edward William Hauck I, II
Elsie Reed Hayes I, II
Clyde Eugene Holley II
Phoebe Merl McClees II
Edith Elvira McConnell I, II
Edith Esther Reynolds I
Alice Lucinda Stearns I
Charlotte Josephine Thomas II
Anna Turner I, II
Ruth Alberta Yeomans I, II
JUNIOR CLASS
Eunice Atkinson II
Harry Alonzo Brandt I
Holland Field Burr I
Mildred Douglas Carr I
Paul Armstrong Davies I, II
Fred Newton Edwards II
Anna Lucile Elliott I, II
Marie Main Frost II
Edith Marguerite Hitchcock I
Winifred Rachel Hogan I, II
Josephine Elizabeth Jacks I, II
Hugh Toland Jones I, II
Clara Petronella Kommers II
Katherine Loney Llewellyn I, II
Mary Edna Lochridge I, II
Margaret Painter II
Ruth Catharina Peterson II
Catherine Fraser Snell I, II
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Mary Frances Beck II
Muriel Dana Emerson II
Beulah Harbour II
POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
Nina Harbour I, II
Hallie Violet Hess I
Ernest Gockley Hoff I, II
Helen Marguerite Mcllvried II
Archie Goodrich Postlethwait II
Ethel Irene Prosser II
Nettie Elsey Pike I
Ellen Queen II
Queenie Santikian II
Ellis Savory I, 11
Carl Irving Wheat II
Hortense Elaine Wickard I, II
Mary Lillian Woodford II
FRESHMAN CLASS
Constance Abbott I, II
Caroline Whitehouse Coleman II
Alfred Woodward Dodge I, II
Ruth Olive Douglas I, II
Mae Margaret Freeman I, II
Clarence Sherman Gillett I, II
Olive Kuntz II
Eleanor Allen Lee II
Ruth Jeannette Povi^ell II
George Emmett Raitt II
Elma Clara Schowalter II
Vesta Marie Slaughter II
Catherine Smiley II
Chester Noyes Thompson II
REGISTER
35
DepariDieiital Honors
Alice Anderson
John Irwin Atkinson
Dorothy Bach
Gertrude Auld Bacon
Edward Logan Campbell
Frank Raymond Cole
Delia Churchill
Inez Lillian Crawford
Kenneth Glendower Darling
May Gertrude Edwards
Maurine Elder Elliott
Elma Vartouhie Elmayan
Bertha Henrietta Goettsche
Edward William Hauck
Elsie Reed Hayes
Grace Louise McCleery
Edith Elvira McConnell
Margaret Metcalf
Ralph James Roth
SENIOR CLASS
Sociology D26
Geology B2
Mathematics D21, D22
Philosophy B4
Psychology Bl, C7
Zoology D19
Chemistry D20
Botany C22
Economics D8
History D6
Sociology D26
History D3, D4
Sociology D26
History C3, C4
Music Dll, D12
Applied Music
Applied Music
Art B12
English C7
Spanish Al, A2
German D12, D5
Latin Co, D6
German Dll
Psychology D8
English C8
Philosophy Co
Psychology C7, D8
Sociology C28
Botany C22, D23
Chemistry A4
Sociology C28
Mathematics CI 8
Philosophy B3
Botany D24
36
POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
Elizabeth Margaret Rust
Arthur Eugene St. Clair
Alice Lucinda Stearns
Charlotte Josephine Thomas
Anna Turner
Alfred Oswald Woodford
Ruth Alberta Yeomans
Applied Music
History C4
Botany B21
Economics C8
Sociology D26
Botany D23, D24
Chemistry C9, CIO
Chemistry D15, D20
Philosophy C6
JUNIOR CLASS
Bertha Harding Allen
Harry Alonzo Brandt
Ruth Bullock
Holland Field Burr
Mildred Douglas Carr
Ralph Dalton Cornell
Paul Armstrong Davies
Anna Lucile Elliott
Donald Frederic Fox
Winifred Rachel Hogan
Josephine Elizabeth Jacks
Warren Benalah James
Hugh Toland Jones
Clara Petronella Kommers
Katharine Loney Llewellyn
Astronomy Bl, B2
Economics C8
English C25
History C5, D6
Philosophy B4
Sociology D26
Psychology Bl
Engineering Al, A2
French Al, A2
Sociology C2 8
Philosophy B4
Mathematics D21, D22
Philosophy B4
English C25
Geology Bl, B2
Psychology Bl
Physiology B3, B4
Chemistry C9
Music A2
Physiology B3, B4
Sociology D26
Latin Al, A2
Sociology D26
Spanish B3, B4
REGISTER
37
Mary Edna Lochridge
Vera Helen Lorbeer
Edith Elizabeth McGee
Anna Marie Norris
Stuart Luther Peck
Catherine Eraser Snell
Alberta Tomlinson
Astronomy C3, D4
Philosophy Bl, B4
Psychology Bl
Sociology D27
Geology B2
Economics C8
Philosophy B4
Chemistry Dll
Art C6
Law D12
Sociology C28
SOPHOMORE CLASS
George Babcock
Earl Gordon Baird
Gladys Vivian Banks
Edna Anne Beatty
Ernest Wilton Bougher
Mayme Church
Hugh Lathrop Clary
Lois Mildred Clency
Claude Craft
Stephen Adelbert Craig
Helen Brown de Camp
Irene Thorburn de Camp
Nina Harbour
Hallie Violet Hess
Florence Twitchell Holme
Grace Alice Hoskins
Rollin Jerome La Follette
History A7, A8
Chemistry A3
Economics C8
History A7, A8
French B4
French Al
Economics C8
Music A4
Chemistry B6
History B2
Botany B21
Chemistry C8
Chemistry CIO
French B4
French B4
French B3, B4
History D6
Psychology B2
Sociology C28
Psychology B4
Spanish A2
History B13
Chemistry B5
38
POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
Byron Stevens Phillips
Nettie Elsey Pike
Archie Goodrich Postlethwait
Ethel Irene Prosser
Queenie Santikian
Helen Whipple Smith
Chi Tsau Wang
Carl Irving Wheat
Harriet Holcomb Windrem
Chemistry B5, CIO
French B4
Chemistry CIO
History B2
History D4
Sociology C28
Music A2
Sociology D26
Chemistry A3
Sociology C28
FRESHMAN CLASS
Constance Abbott
Claude Elias Arnett
Paul Carrier Blaisdell
Jesse Ludwig Cobb
Wilbur Kirkpatrick Cobb
Vesta Maud Cornell
Ray Frederick Cromer
John Carey Dement, Jr.
Sophie Lois Doane
Alfred Woodward Dodge
Ruth Olive Douglas
Murray Ferguson
Mae Margaret Freeman
Leon Lloyd Gardner
William Ferguson Hamilton
Edith Helen Hartley
Alberta Haskins
Marion Elizabeth Hauck
Allen Franklin Hawley
Olive Kuntz
English Al
History A8
Physiology B3, B4
History A8
History A8
English A2
Engineering Al, A2
English A2
Music A2
Chemistry Al, A2, B5, B6
Engineering B4
Mathematics B7, B8
Chemistry B5
French A2
Chemistry B5
French B3, B4
Biology Al
Chemistry A2, B5, B6
Chemistry A4
English A22
Applied Music
History A7, A8
Chemistry Al, B5, B6
Mathematics A6
REGISTER
39
Edwin Munderloh Landale
Eleanor Allen Lee
Lydia Mangold
Callie McCormick
J D Mehl
Ruth Jeanette Powell
George Emmett Raitt
Mary Alice Sharps
Elma Clara Schowalter
Vesta Marie Slaughter
Catherine Smiley
Katherine Stein
Andrew Acker Sugg
Chester Noyes Thompson
Dorothea Webster
Stephen Hallett Willard
Marjorie Burton Woodford
Frances Yeomans
History B2
Mathematics B7, B8
Philosophy Bl ,
English A22
Music B6
Mathematics A6
English A2
Engineering Al, A2
Latin Al
Engineering B4
English Al
Engineering A2
English A2
French Al
English Al
Applied Music
Chemistry B5
Chemistry B5
English Al
German B3
Chemistry B5
German B3
Mathematics A5, A6
Chemistry A4
4 POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
Prizes Awarded in 1 9 1 3
The Home Oratorical Contest
Donald Frederic Fox, Pasadena
Clyde Eugene Holley, Claremont
The Condit Contest in Extemperaneous Address
Clyde Eugene Holley, Claremont
The Dole Debate
Carl Irving Wheat, Los Angeles
George Thomas Babcock, Pomona
The Kinney Declamation Contest
Paul Carrier Blaisdell, Claremont
James Brooks Blaisdell, Claremont
The Vaile Prizes
(Not given)
The Mudge Latin Prize
(Not given)
The Llewellyn Bixby Mathematics Prize
Margaret Metcalf, Claremont
The Moncrieff Prize in Astronomy
Bertha Harding Allen, Pasadena
The Lorbeer Prizes
Hallie Violet Hess, Upland
Charlotte Neely, Claremont
"^dbux^ Li .'. ' S'0,^1 I c,
Pomona College
Bulletin
ANNUAL REGISTER
AND
Circular of Information
/
/ol. XII
MARCH. 1915
No. 2
CLAREMONT, CALIFORNIA
Published Bi-monthly by Pomona College
Entered at the Postoffice, Claremont, California, as Second-Class Matter
POMONA COLLEGE
LOCATION
Pomona College is located at Claremont, California, oi
the Santa Fe and the Pacific Electric Railways, 35 miles
from Los Angeles. Pomona is about four miles distant on
the Southern Pacific and Salt Lake Railways, and is con-
nected with Claremont by an electric line.
CORRESPONDENCE
Claremont, California, is the post-oflSce address for all
mail intended for those connected with Pomona College.
General correspondence should be directed to the President
or Pomona College.
Special correspondence regarding the admission or stand-
ing of students should be directed to the Registrar.
ANNOUNCEMENT
The complete catalog of the College is issued in June, and
may be had on application to the Registrar.
BEQUESTS AND LEGACIES
Pomona College is a corporation formed and existing
under the laws of the State of California. In making be-
quests or legacies, the testator should use the corporation
name, which is "Pomona College."
IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT
LIMITATION OF NUMBERS
Throughout its history Pomona College has consistently
emphasized the wisdom of the most deliberate and ade-
quate educational preparation for life. To this end the in-
stitution seeks primarily to serve such students as are plan-
ning to lay ample foundations in a broad and thorough
college training. That the College may do its work most
efficiently it seeks to maintain the highest standards of schol-
arship and character. Only such students are desired as are
prepared to concentrate on the main values of college life.
To the end that the College may maintain this ideal
for itself and its graduates and that every student admitted
may have the best assurance of personal interest and par-
ticular attention, the College will, for the present, limit its
entering Freshman class to the number now reached,
namely, two hundred students, of whom one hundred may
be men and one hundred women. It is believed that this
limitation of numbers will be realized by all to be a guar-
antee of unusual advantages and individual interest to all
who secure admission.
The notable progress recently made by the College in
its resources will unboubtedly attract a largely increased
number of applicants and all students, therefore, wishing
to assure themselves of a place in the College the coming
year should promptly enter into correspondence with the
Registrar of the institution. Full details of the method of
acceptance of candidates will be found on page 45. In
such selection matters of scholarship, character and pur-
pose vidll have a large weight. Certification through
responsible references wall be required in connection with
the filing of the formal certificates of application.
Twenty-seventh Year
Pomona College
ANNUAL REGISTER
Of the Officers, Teachers
and Students of Pomona
College in 1914—1915,
with Requirements for
Admission and General
Information : : : . : :
March, 1915
CLAREMONT, CALIFORNIA
Published by the College
(P^ A%o USU^
CONTENTS
College Calendar 7
Historical Sketch 9
Amended Articles of Incorporation 11
Board of Trustees 13
Committees of the Board --. 14
Faculty 15
Administrative Officers 21
Advisers and Assistants 21
Standing Committees 22
General Information 23
Location and Surroundings 23
Buildings and Equipment 23
Honors and Prizes 27
Phi Beta Kappa 28
Oratorical and Debating Contests 28
Student Activities 28
Departmental Activities 31
College Publications 32
Bureau of Appointments 33
Registration 33
Reports 34
Public Assemblies 35
General Requirements 35
Student Aid 36
Physical Attention 38
Expenses 39
Rooms 39
Dormitories 39
Board 41
Summary of Expenses 41
Tuition 42
Requirements for Admission 44
General Requirements and Methods of Admission 44
Requirements for Matriculation 45
Admission to Freshman Standing 45
Admission to Advanced Standing 46
Admission as Special Students 47
Credits for Non-Commended Work.. 47
Courses Required for Admission to Freshman Stand-
ing 48
Description of Subjects 49
Extra Entrance Credits 53
4 POMONA COLLEGE
Requirements for Graduation 54
Bachelor of Arts Degree 54
Hour Requirements 54
Credit Requirements 54
Graduation with Honors 55
Group Requirements 55
Subject Requirements 55
Curriculum 57
Freshman Year 57
Sophomore Year 57
Junior and Senior Years 58
List of Courses 58
Open to Freshmen (and Sophomores) 58
Open to Sophomores (and Upper -classmen) 59
Open to Seniors and Juniors 60
Advanced Work 64
Master's Degrees 64
Students 65
Graduate Students 65
Senior Class , 66
Junior Class 67
Sophomore Class 69
Freshman Class 73
Special Students 77
Special Music and Art Students 78
Summary 78
Degrees, Honors and Prizes 79
CALENDAR
JULY
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AUGUST
SEPTEMBER
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DECEMBER
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JANUARY
FEBRUARY
MARCH
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20 21 22 23 24 25 26
19 20 21 22 23 24 25] i
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
27 28 29
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14 15 16 17 18 19 20
11 12 13 14 15 16 m '
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P 24 25 26 27 28 29
28 29 30 31
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COLLEGE CALENDAR
1915
May 30 Sunday
June 3 Thursday
June 2 Wednesdai/
to
June 12 Saturday
J line 13 Sunday
June H Mondaii
June 15 Tuesday
Memorial Day
Last day for choice of studies for
the following semester
Final Examinations
Baccalaureate Sermon, 10 a. m.
Annual Address before the Chris-
tian Associations of the College,
7:30 p. m.
Dole Prize Debate, 3 p. m.
Phi Beta Kappa Anniversary, 8
p. m.
Class Day
Annual Meeting of the Board of
Trustees
President's Reception, 4 to 6 p. m.
Senior Class Play, 8 p. m.
\Annual Exhibit of the School of
( Art and Design
Commencement Exercises, 10 a. m.
Informal Addresses, 2 p. m.
Annual Meeting of Alumni, 4 p.m.
Alumni Banquet, 7 p. m.
Summer Session begins
Summer Session closes
1 Registration Days. Monday and
1- Tuesday, examinations for en-
trance
September 22 TFedjiesdo;/ Academic year begins, 10:30 a. m.
October H Thursday Founders' Day
Date to be chosen Senior-Junior Mountain Day
Date to be chosen Sophomore-Freshman Mountain
Day
November 2U Wednesday Thanksgiving Recess begins, 11:30
a. m.
November 29 Monday Thanksgiving Recess ends, 10:30
a. m.
December 17 Friday- Christmas Recess begins, 11:30
a. m.
June 15
June 16
June 16
Tuesday
Wednesday
Wednesdai/
June 21 Monday
July 30 Friday
September 20 Monday
September 21 Tuesday
September 22 Wednesday
8
POMONA COLLEGE
1916
January U Tuesday
Jamiary 13 Thursday
January 2U Monday
January 20 Thursday
January 2U Monday
to
February 3 Thursday
February i Friday
Febrxiary 5 Saturday
February 17 Thursday
February 22 Tuesday
Date to be chosen
Date to be chosen
Date to be chosen
March 2U Friday
April U Tuesday
May 30 Tuesday
June 1 Thursday
June 7 Wednesday
to
June 17 Saturday
June 17 Saturday
June 18 Sunday
June 19 Monday
June 20 Tuesday
June 20 Tuesday
June 21 Wednesday
June 21 Wednesday
Chi-istmas Recess ends, 11:30 a.m.
Last day for choice of studies for
the following semester
Kinney Freshman Contest in Dec-
lamation, 8 p. m.
Day of Prayer for Colleges
Mid-year Examinations
i Registration Days for Second Se-
mester. Examinations for en-
' trance
Matriculation Day
Washington's Birthday
Senior ■ Mountain Day
Senior-Junior Mountain Day
Sophomore-Freshman Mountain
Day
Spring Recess begins, 11:30 a. m.
Spring Recess ends, 11:30 a. m.
Memorial Day
Last day for choice of studies for
the following semester
Final examinations
Choral Union Concert, 8 p. m.
Baccalaureate Sermon, 10 a. m.
Annual Address before the Christ-
ian Associations of the College,
7:30 p. m.
Dole Prize Debate, 3 p. m.
Phi Beta Kappa Anniversary, 8
p. m.
Class Day
Annual Meeting of the Board of
Trustees
President's Reception, 4 to 6 -^. m.
Senior Class Play, 8 p. m.
}_ Annual Exhibit of the School of
'i Art and Design
Commencement Exercises, 10 a. m.
Informal Addresses, 2 p. m.
Annual Meeting of Alumni, 4 p. m.
Alumni Banquet, 7 p. m.
Historical Sketch
The history of the development of Southern California
from a land sparsely inhabited and thought fit only for a
cattle range into a genuine American commonwealth, with
its multitude of prosperotis communities, covers less than
forty years, but those are years of intense activity and re-
markable growth.
The completion of a second transcontinental railway in
1886, together with the realization of the great agricultural
possibilities of the section through irrigation, induced at that
time a rapid immigration and a great inflation of land values.
On every hand new towns sprang up almost in a day and all
the scenes of eager frontier life were being enacted.
While the dominant interests were naturally commercial
and speculative, there were many among the new settlers
whose chief concern was for the higher values of life and
character. Not least among these were those whose former
affiliations had been with New England and its institutions.
The Southern California District Association of Congrega-
tional Churches, meeting at San Bernardino in 1882, agi-
tated the question of the founding of a college of the New
England type. In 1886 the Association met at Lugonia
(now Redlands) , when the report of the educational com-
mittee was an earnest appeal for such a college. At this
meeting a larger educational committee than usual was ap-
pointed and was instructed to view locations and invite pro-
posals of aid toward establishing a "Christian college of the
New England type." In accordance with these instructions
the committee visited various places from which they had
received oflfers of aid.
In May, 1887, the District Association met in Los Angeles
and became the General Association of Southern California.
This General Association immediately gave full power to its
committee of education, not only to select the college site,
but to appoint trustees for the institution which was to be.
10 POMONA COLLEGE
Fifteen trustees, three of whom are still members of the
board, were duly appointed and the college was incorporated
October 14, 1887, under the name of The Pomona College. ■
The site selected was about four miles north of the City of
Pomona.
For the immediate needs of the College a small private
house was rented in Pomona, and in it the work of instruc-
tion was begun in September, 1888. In the following
January an unfinished hotel in Claremont (now Sumner
Hall), together with considerable land adjacent, was given
to the college and the work was transferred to that place.
Later the site originally selected was given ,up and Clare-
mont was made the permanent seat of the college.
The first class was graduated in 1894, at which time the
total number of college students was forty-seven. In 1914
the graduating class numbered sixty-nine and the present
enrollment is five hundred and forty-one.
The original campus of about twelve acres has been
enlarged by purchase and by gifts, until it now comprises
over one hundred acres. A plan for the development of
the campus and its buildings has been carefully worked out
by competent landscape gardeners and architects, and all
growth is in accordance with this harmonious plan.
The Board of Trustees is a self-perpetuating body, free
from all ecclesiastical control, but pledged by the College
charter to maintain an institution thoroughly Christian and
thoroughly unsectarian.
From the first it has been the policy of trustees and fac-
ulty to maintain a high standing of college life and work,
and to put the emphasis upon quality in the development
of strong and serviceable Christian manhood and woman-
hood. Thus the purpose for which the College was founded
is expressed in its motto. Our Tribute to Christian Civiliza-
tion.
Amended Articles of Incorporation
Whereas, at a meeting of "The Pomona College," a cor-
poration, duly called and held on the 2ist" day of February,
1907, a majority of said members being present, it was
unanimously voted to amend the Articles of Incorporation
of said corporation by changing the name of said corporation
from "The Pomona College" to "Pomona College," and by
making various amendments, as hereafter set forth, and
Whereas, after due and legal notice given, as required
by law, the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, did on
the 28th day of June, 1909, upon the petition of a majority
of the members of said corporation, make an order author-
izing the change of the name of said corporation from "The
Pomona College" to "Pomona College," and
Whereas, there has been filed with the Secretary of said
corporation, the written assent of more than a majority
of the members of said corporation to making and filing of
the amended articles of incorporation, as hereinafter set
forth; now, therefore,
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS:
That we, the undersigned, have this day voluntarily asso-
ciated ourselves together for the purpose of forming a cor-
poration under the law^s of the State of California, and we
hereby certify:
That the name of said corporation shall be "Pomona
College."
II.
That the purposes for which it is formed are:
(a) To establish, maintain and conduct a College and
Academy of Learning, with all the powers and privileges
conferred by law upon such corporation.
12 - POMONA COLLEGE
(b) That said College and Academy shall be distinc-
tively Christian, in harmony with Evangelical Churches, but
not sectarian, and shall be open to students of both sexes.
(c) To buy and sell, hold, rent, lease and otherwise
handle or dispose of, as may be necessary for the conduct
of said corporation, all kinds of real and personal property.
(d) To receive, manage and hold gifts and bequests for
the use and benefit of said institution, or any work conducted
by said institution or for the benefit of any person or per-
sons concerned with said institution.
III.
The location of said College shall be at Claremont,
County of Los Angeles, State of California, which shall be
the location of the principal office of said corporation. The
location of the Academy shall be at such place within the
State of California, as may be designated by the Board of
Trustees of said corporation.
IV.
That the number of Trustees shall be twenty-five. The
names and residences of those chosen to act as Trustees,
and who are now acting as Trustees of said corporation,
are as follows:
(Here follow the names and residences of the Trustees.)
V.
There has been subscribed the following property to assist
in founding the College and Seminary:
(Here follows the description of the property.)
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
George W. Marston, President, San Diego
Rt. Eev. Joseph H. Johnson, d. d., Vice-President, Los An-
geles
Rev. Charles B. Sumner, ll.d., Secretary, Claremont
Charles E. Walker, Treasurer, Pomona
Allen P. Nichols, Auditor, Pomona
Term of Office Expires, June, 1915
Nathan W. Blanchard, Santa Paula
Eli p. Clark, Los Angeles
John Fleming, San Diego
George W. Marston, San Diego
Allen P. Nichols, Pomona
Term of Office Expires, June, 1916
Rev. Frank M. Dowling, Fullerton
Rt. Rev. Joseph H. Johnson, d.d., Los Angeles
Frederick W. Lyman, Pasadena
Butler A. Woodford, Claremont
Francis C. Yeomans, Long Beach
Term of Office Expires, June, 1917
Charles C. Chapman, Fullerton
Edwin F. Hahn, Pasadena
Stephen H. Herrick, Riverside
Seeley W. Mudd, Los Angeles
Charles E. Walker, Pomona
Term of Office Expires, June, 1918
Llewellyn Bixby, Long Beach
Rev. William Horace Day, d.d., Los Angeles
Arthur M. Dole, Pomona
Rev. Henry Kingman, d.d., Claremont
William S. Mason, Evanston, HI.
Term of Office Expires, June, 1919
James A. Blaisdell, d.d., Claremont
Charles E. Harwood, Upland
Rev. Charles B. Sumner, ll.d., Claremont
W. H. R. Weldon, South Pasadena
Fred M. Wilcox, Lamanda Park
Rev. Edward F. Goff, Business Manager, Claremont
14 POMONA COLLEGE
Committees of the Board
Executive Committee
James A. Blaisdell, Chairman
Charles B. Sumner, Secretary
Arthur M. Dole
Charles E. Harwoop
Charles E. Walker
Fred M. Wilcox
Butler A. Woodford
Committee on Ways and Means
George W. Marston
Joseph H. Johnson
James A. Blaisdell
Nathan W. Blanchard
Eli p. Clark
Stephen H. Herrick
Henry Kingman
William S. Mason
Seeley W. Mudd
Committee on Education
James A. Blaisdell
Llewellyn Bixby
William H. Day
Frank M. Dowling
Edwin F. Hahn
Com,m,ittee on Buildings and Grounds*
Charles B. Sumner
George W. Marston
Committee on Nominations
James A. Blaisdell
Llewellyn Bixby
Charles B. Sumner
*In conjunction with a committee of tlie Faculty
FACULTY
James Arnold Blaisdell 339 college Ave.
President, 1910^
B.A.. Beloit College: M.A., Beloit College: D.D., Beloit Col-
lege. Graduate, Hartford Theological Seminary.
Edwin Clarence Norton 137 w. seventh st.
Dean of the College and Professor of the Greek Language
and Literature on the Edwin Clarence Norton
Foundation, 1888
B.A., Amherst College: M.A., Amherst College and Yale
University: Ph. D., Carleton College; D.D., Pacific Theological
Seminary. Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins and Oxford Uni-
versities.
Frank Parkhurst Brackett 270 e. Third st.
Professor of Mathematics 07i the Joseph W. Fiske Founda-
tion and Director of the Obse7-vatory, 1888
B.A., Dartmoutli College: M.A., Dartmouth College. Hon-
orary Fellow, Clark LTniversity.
Phebe Estelle Spalding 261 m^ Fifth st.
Professor of English Literature on the Phebe Estelle
Spalding Foundation, 1889
B.L., Carleton College: M.L., Carleton College: Ph.D.. Bos-
ton University.
Daniel Herbert Colcord 1.57 e. seventh st.
Professor of the Latin Language and Literature, 1890
B.A., Amherst College; M.A., Amherst College: B.D.. And-
over Theological Seminary. Graduate Student, Harvard Uni-
versity.
Arthur Dart BiSSELL 319 Harvard Ave.
Professor of German, 1892
B.A.. Amherst College: M.A., Amherst College: B.D., Yale
University. Graduate Student, Yale University and University
of Leipzig.
George Gale Hitchcock 236 College Ave.
Professor of Physics, 1892
B.A., University of Nebraska. Graduate Student, .Johns
Hopkins and Cornell Universities.
'The date in each case denotes the beginning of ori.ginal term
of service.
16 POMONA COLLEGE
Albert John Cook Sacramento
Emeritus Professor of Biology, 189i
B.S., Michigan Agricultural College; M.S., Michigan Agri-
cultural College; D.Sc, Michigan Agricultural College. Grad-
uate Student, Harvard and Cornell Universities.
George Stedman Sumner 105 college Ave.
Professor of Economics and Sociology on the Stedman-
Sumtier Foundation, 1897
B.A., Pomona College; B.A., Yale Universitv; Ph.D., Yale
University.
Charles Cummings Stearns 146 e. Tenth st.
Professor of Biblical History and Literature on the Nancy
M. Lyon Foundation, 1906
B.A., Yale University; M.A., Yale University: B.D.. Union
Theological Seminary. Graduate Student, University of Berlin.
Grace Ella Berry Sumner Haii
Dean of Women and Assistant Professor of Mathematics
1909
B.S.. Mount Holyoke College; M. A., Mount Holyoke College.
James Alexander Lyman 83.3 Indian Hiii Blvd.
Professor of Chemistry, 1909
B.A., Beloit College; M.A., Beloit College; Ph.D.. Johns
Hopkins University. Graduate Student, L^niversity of Chicago.
Milton Erastus Churchill 507 Yaie Ave.
Secretary of the Faculty and Associate Professor of German
1902
B.A., Knox College; M.A., Knox College; Litt. D.. Knox
College; B.D., Yale University. Graduate Student, University
of Leipzig.
MeNDAL GaRBUTT FRAMPTON 927 Harvard Ave.
Professor of the English Language, 190i
B.A., Illinois College: M.A., Illinois College: M.A., Harvard
University. Graduate Student. Harvard and Chicago Univer-
sities.
Francis Harding White 232 w. Fifth st.
Professor of History, 1905
B.A., Princeton LTniversity; M.A., Harvard University;
Ph.D., Har\'ard University.
Charles Gracchus Neely 1122 college Ave.
Professor of Constitutional History and Law, 1911
B.L., University of Illinois.
ANNUAL REGISTER 17
William Atwood Hilton 240 w. sixth st.
Professor of Zoology on the Willard George Halstead
Foundation, 1905
B.S.. Cornell University; Ph.D., Cornell University.
Fred Albert Bacon 425 Harvard Ave.
Professor of Applied Music and Instructor in Singing, 1902
Student in Ohio Wesleyan University, Oberlin Conservatory
of Music, Chicago Conservatory of Music and Chicago Musical
College.
Robert Day Williams 1264 Dartmouth Ave.
Professor of Psychology and Education, 1909
B.S.. Pomona College: M.A.. Yale University: Ph.D., Yale
University. Graduate Student, University of California.
Willis Allen Parker 545 Indian Hiii Blvd.
Professor of Philosophy, 1912
B.A.. Kansas State Normal School; M.A., Harvard Uni-
versity; Ph.D.. Harvard L^niversity.
William Polk Russell 506 e. sixth st.
Associate Professor of Mathematics, 190If
B.A.. Cumberland University; M.A., Cumberland Univer-
sity. Graduate Student. Yale University.
MaRO BeATH Jones college Ave. and Eighth St.
Associate Professoi' of Romance Languages, 1911
B.A., Boston LTniversity. Graduate Student, Universities
of Geneva and Barcelona. Student, Estudis Universitaris
Catalans.
Hannah Tempest Jenkins ciaremont inn
Assistant Professor of Art and Design, 1905
Graduate, Teacher's College, Columbia University. Student,
Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts. Pupil of Jean Paul Laur-
ens, Constant and St. Pierre in figure and portrait, of Henry
Thompson in landscape, and of Wm. M. Chase, Robert Vonnoh
and Cecelia Beaux In portrait. Paris Salonlst, 1889.
Robert Tresilian Belcher i69 w. sixth st.
Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Engineering, 1907
B.A., Queen's University. Graduate Student, Queen's Col-
lege and University of California.
18 POMONA COLLEGE
Arthur VOLNEY StOUGHTON 146 W. seventh st.
Assistant Professor of Physiology and Hygiene, 1911
B.A.. Pomona College; M.D., Ohio Medical University.
Graduate Student, Medical Department of Johns Hoplcins Uni-
versity and ^Medical School of Harvard University. Student,
Laboratories of Friedrichshain Krankenhaus and private labor-
atory of Professor Pick, Berlin. Resident physician, Protestant
Hospital, Columbus, O.
Walter Alfred Allen ciaremont inn
Assistant Professor of Musical Theory and Appreciation,,
and Instructor in Organ, 1912
B.A., Beloit College. Graduate Student. Yale University.
William Layton Stanton ■ Giendora
Assistaiit Professor of Physical Education for Meyi, 1908
B.A., Dickinson College. Graduate Student, Columbia Uni-
versity.
Laura Charlton Squire 248 w. Seventh st.
Assistant Professor of Physical Education for Women, 1910
B.A.. Pomona College. Graduate Student, University of
California and Wellesley College.
Robert Martin Staples First st. and Yaie Ave.
Assistant Professor of Violin, 1907
Pupil of .Joachim and Dancla.
Edward PaYSON BaRTLETT ciaremont Inn
Assistant Professor of Chemistry, 1909
B.A.. Dartmouth College; M.A., Harvard University.
William Sheffield Ament 135 e. Ninth st.
Assistant Professor of English, 1912
B.A., Oberlin College.
David Livingstone Crawford 1.31 e. Tenth st.
Acting Assistant Professor of Botany on the Henry Kirke
White Beyit Foundation, 191U
B.A., Pomona College; M.A., Leland Stanford University.
Graduate Student, Cornell University.
ANNUAL REGISTER 19
Victor Edward Marriott 2C1 w. Fifth st.
Acting Librarian, 1912
B.A., Beloit College. Graduate Student. Yale l.'niversity
and University of California.
Mable Clair West loie Columbia Ave.
Instructor in Piano, 1905
B.S.. Pomona College. Graduate Student. Peabody Con-
servatory of Music. Baltimore.
Frances Benton Clapp 125 w. Seventh st.
Instructor in Piano and History of Music, 1912
B.A.. Pacific L'niversity: Holder of Diploma in Music. Pac-
ific Uni\-ersity. Graduate Student. Pacific University. Student
in Piano of Alberto Jonas. Berlin, 1910-1912. Student in Theory
and Composition, Professor Paul Colberg. Dresden. 1911.
Irving Otis Pecker ciaremont inn
Instructor in Romance Languages, 1912
B.A., Boston LTniversity. Graduate Student, Boston Uni-
MrS. Harry Dow Kirk 628 Dartmouth Ave.
Instructor in Singing, 1912
William Holland Matlock 306 College Ave.
Instructor in German, 1913
Ph.B.. Drake University. Graduate Student. Goettingen,
Heidelberg and Munich, the Sorbonne and College of France.
Mary Stoddard Roof 407 Harvard Ave.
Instructor in Physical Education for Women, 19H
B.A., Pomona College.
Paul Armstrong Davies m 10 Smiiey Haii
Instructor in English, 191J+
B.A.. Pomona College.
Harry Alonzo Brandt m 10 Smiiey Haii
Instructor in Economics and English, 1911^
B.A., Pomona College.
20 POMONA COLLEGE
Harriet PaSMORE second St. and college Ave.
Instructor in Piano and Singing, 19H.
B.A., University of California.
Stuart Luther Peck 140 Mesa Ave.
Assistant in Chemistry, 19H.
B.S., Pomona College.
Philip Smead Bird ciaremont inn
Lecturer on Biblical Literature, 1913
B.A., Pomona College; M.L,., University of California. Grad-
uate. Union Theological Seminary. Associate Pastor of the
Ciaremont Church.
Rev. Washington Gladden Coiumbus, o.
Lecturer on Economic and Social Problems, 19H
B.A., Williams College; LL.D., University of Wisconsin;
D.D., Roanoake College.
George Winfield Scott Los Angeles
Lecturer on Diplomacy and International Law, 19H.
B.A.. Leland Stanford University and Cornell University;
LL.B., University of Pennsylvania; Ph.D., University of Penn-
sylvania.
ANNUAL REGISTER , 21
Administrative Officers of the Faculty
James Arnold BlAISDELL, D.D. President's Rooms, Library
President
Edwin Clarence Norton, ph.d. Dean's office, Holmes Haii
Dean
Grace Ella Berry, m.a., Sumner Haii
Dean of Women
Milton Erastus Churchill, litt.d.
Secretary's Office, Room 52, Library
Secretary of the Faculty
Frank PaRKHURST BrACKETT, m.a. Tlie Observatory
Director of the Observatory
Mendal Garbutt Frampton, m.a.
Registrar's Office, Holmes Hall
Acting Registrar
Victor Edward Marriott, b.a. Library
Acting Librarian and Secretary to the President
Marion Jeanette Ewing, b.a. 125 w. Seventh st.
Assistant Librarian
Georgia Grace Thomas 261 w. Fifth st.
Assistant Registrar and Assistant Secretary of the Faculty
Advisers and Assistants
Men — Professor Neely
Senior Class — Professors Brackett and Williams
Junior Class — Professors Colcord and Bissell
Sophomore Class — Professors Sumner and Stearns
Freshman Class — Professors Parker and Berry; Messrs.
Marriott and Ament
Department of Music — Professor Bacon
Department of Art and Design — Mrs. Jenkins
22 POMONA COLLEGE
Other Officers
Edward Fade GoFF 338 Harvard Ave.
Business Manager
Ernest Ea'erett Jones, b.s. i36 e. Ninth st.
Assistant Business Manager and Business Manager of
Student Activities
Allen P. Nichols Pomona
Auditor
PERSIS Ethel GeiER, B.A. 339 College Ave.
Cashier
Mary Louise Billings 541 Harvard Ave.
General Office Secretary
Sarah Louise Jewell Sumner Haii
Matron of Sumner Hall
Florence Marie Fox 339 college Ave.
Office Assistant
Forest Glenn Hutchison Biancimrd Park
Superintendent of Grounds
Carl Mauritz Carlson 922 Columbia Ave.
Superintendent of Buildings
Standing Committees
The Standing Committees for the year 1915 — 1916 will
be published in the College Directory, September, 1915.
GENERAL INFORMATION
Location and Surroundings
Claremont is situated on the Santa Fe and Pacific Elec-
tric Railways, thirty-five miles from Los Angeles. It is
connected by the Pacific Electric Railway with Pomona,
which is four miles distant, on the Salt Lake and Southern
Pacific roads. On the rim of an orchard-covered valley,
which is hemmed in on all sides by lofty mountains, and
with Mt. San Antonio in the immediate background, rising
to a height of ten thousand feet, its location is one of rare
beauty. Its water supply is taken fi'om artesian wells at
the base of the foothills. The town, which now numbers
about 1800 inhabitants, owes its existence to the College and
has the attractive features of the typical college town.
Buildings and Equipment
The College grounds consist of about one hundred acres,
of which sixty are included in Blanchard Park, about ten in
Alumni Field, and the remainder in the campus proper.
There are fourteen buildings on the college campus heated
from a central heating plant.
The Mary L. Sumner Hall, named in memory of the wife
of Professor Charles B. Sumner, is a dormitory affording
accomodations for seventy women.
Holmes Hall, a memorial of Cyrus W. Holmes, Jr., of
Monson, Massachusetts, is devoted mainly to recitation
rooms, and the offices of the registrar.
Pearsons Hall of Science, the gift of Dr. D. K. Pearsons,
contains the museum, and the laboratories and lecture rooms
of the departments of chemistry, botany, physics and geol-
ogy. In this building, too, is the Business Office.
The museum is equipped especially for the work in
24 POMONA COLLEGE
biology, botany and zoology. It contains an abundance of
good synoptical material, including about two hundred and
fifty thousand zoological specimens and an herbarium of
about two hundred thousand sheets of plants. The Seaver-
Rivers collection contains fifty thousand specimens of fossil
Mollusca collected in the Pliocene of Santa Monica, Cali-
fornia, by Dr. Rivers, formerly Curator of the Museum of
the State University.
The chemical laboratories are equipped with hoods, gas
generators, steam baths, and the usual appliances demanded
for thoroughly good work. The department is equipped
throughout with water, gas and electricity and has individual
desks, and equipment for one hundred and eight students.
The physical laboratories are well equipped with appa-
ratus selected from standard patterns of the best domestic
and foreign instrument makers. Each year valuable addi-
tions are made to the equipment.
The biological laboratories contain an extensive series of
skeletons and models for use in comparative anatomy. For
laboratory work, in general and advanced zoology, there is
abundant material, both wet and dry, from all parts of the
world. The reference collections for use in general and
special entomology are in many respects unexcelled.
The botanical equipment, besides the herbarium, has for
use in general mycology a complete bacteriological outfit of
sterilizers, incubators, and cultural apparatus.
All of these laboratories possess full batteries of micro-
scopes and microtomes, and are well equipped with all the
extensive apparatus and appliances necessary in anatomical,
physiological, histological, and embryological work.
The Library, the gift of Andrew Carnegie, in addition to
housing the library, contains the offices of the President and
the Secretary of the Faculty, the General Office, and seminar
rooms. Besides the library, the College possesses three
notable collections; the Cook-Baker Biological Library, the
Astronomical Collection, and the Mason Collection of Cali-
forniana. The total number of volumes is nearly 22,000.
ANNUAL REGISTER 25
The library also receives two hundred and eighty-eight
periodicals, including a majority of the best scholastic jour-
nals. In addition to these, a large number of technical
publications are received in exchange for the scientific pub-
lications of the College, and are kept on file in the two
departmental libraries.
The library is a depository for the publications of the
Carnegie Institution at Washington, and also for the United
States Government documents.
In addition to its own resources, the library has arrange-
ments with the State Library, the State University Library
and the Los Angeles City Library, whereby it can draw
upon these great depositories for valuable works not found
save in the largest libraries.
The Frank P. Brackett Observatory, the gift of Mr.
Llewellyn Bixby, '01, is designed throughout to be of service
to the student in the direct study of the stars. It stands in
an attractive spot upon an elevation in Blanchard Park. Its
equipment includes an equatorial telescope, with a Clark
objective of six inches clear aperture, and a mounting,
which includes driving clock and other modern conveniences,
made by Wm. Gaertner of Chicago, a three-inch astronom-
ical transit and chronograph, both made by the Gaertner
Company, a standard Riefler clock for mean solar time, and
a less expensive clock for sidereal time; also a horizontal
telescope with a six-inch objective, having a focal length of
forty feet and a coelostat. In connection with this is em-
ployed a thirteen-foot spectrograph with a two-inch grating,
loaned by Mt. Wilson Solar Observatory.
The Albert K. Smiley Hall, of reinfoi'ced concrete with
Spanish tile roof, is the dormitory for men. It has both
single rooms and suites of three rooms, affording accommo-
dations for eighty students.
Rembrandt Hall, the first section of the Art Building, is
devoted chiefly to the work of the Department of Art. The
upper floor contains studio and work rooms: the lower floor
26 POMONA COLLEGE
a convenient auditorium of moderate size for exhibits and
assemblies.
The Mabel S. Bridges Hall of Music, the gift of Mr. and
Mrs. Appleton S. Bridges, of San Diego, just completed,
offers opportunities for the study of music unexcelled in
Southern California. Besides numerous studio and practice
rooms it contains a large auditorium and a three manual
pipe organ. It is here that the daily chapel service is held
as well as the concerts of the Choral Union and the recitals
of faculty and students. The building is of reinforced con-
crete with Spanish tile roof.
The Renwick Gymnasium contains ample equipment for
physical training, together with shower bath and locker
facilities to make of the highest usefulness the swimming
pool which adjoins it.
The Claremont Inn has, besides a large student dining
room and club room for the College Commons, accommoda-
tions for eighty guests.
The Greek Theater, built to take advantage of the natural
setting of Blanchard Park, though uncompleted, has at
present a seating capacity of over 4000. Here the great
Historical Pageant was given in 1913 ; here are given the
senior plays, various concerts and entertainments; and here
are held student rallies about bonfires built in the center
space.
The Agricultural and Botanical Laboratory, situated near
the Pearsons Hall of Science, consists of a greenhouse, a
lath house and a central class room.
The Marine Laboratory, located at Laguna Beach, has
nine private rooms for special workers and two general
laboratories, as well as storerooms, work room and aquarium
room.
Various other smaller buildings add to the completeness
of the College plant.
ANNUAL REGISTER 27
Honors and Prizes
General Scholarship Honors and Special Departmental
Honors are announced at the close of each semester.
General Scholarship Honors are awarded to those who
have attained a grade of at least A in all courses pursued
and are open only to matriculated students who are also
candidates for a degree.
Special Departmental Honors are awarded to those who
have attained AA grade in at least one course and have not
fallen below B in any other.
The Dole Prizes. A prize debate, open to the Sophomore
class, upon some subject selected by the faculty, is arranged
for the close of the second semester. First and second prizes
of ten and five dollars respectively, established by the late
Mr. .J. H. Dole, in memory of his brother, Mr. W. B. Dole,
are endowed by Mr. A. M. Dole.
The Mudge Latin Prize. A prize for excellence in Latin
offered to Sophomores completing Latin B3 and B4.
The Llewellyn Bixby Mathematics Prize. A prize for
excellence in Analytic Geometry and Calculus; open to all
students completing Mathematics C17 and C18. A prize of
ten dollars is given by Mr. Llewellyn Bixby.
The Kinney Prizes. A prize declamation contest, open to
the members of the Freshman class, occurs toward the end
of the first semester. First and second prizes of ten and
five dollars, respectively, are given by Mrs. H. N. Kinney.
The Vaile Prizes. Prizes for the best essay or oration on
the general subject of Agriculture in Southern California;
open to the Junior and Senior classes. First and second
prizes of ten and five dollars respectively are endowed by
Mr. Charles S. Vaile.
The Lorbeer Prizes. Prizes for the best essay on the sub-
ject, "How to Keep Well"; open to all who take the course
in Anatomy and Physiology. First and second prizes of fif-
teen and ten dollars respectively are given by Dr. Thomas
L. Lorbeer, '03.
28 POMONA COLLEGE
The Moncrieff Astronomy Prize. A prize given to the
student in a first year course in Astronomy, taken regularly
in class, whose interest in the study and proficiency in the
observatory work are indicated by the best notebook kept in
accordance with the teacher's suggestion. A prize of ten
dollars is given by Miss Flossie C. Moncrieff, '11.
The George A. Gates Prize. A prize given for the best
paper upon one of five subjects, dealing with social better-
ment, selected by the teachers of History and the social
sciences. A prize of twenty-five dollars is endowed by cer-
tain Alumni and other friends of Dr. Gates.
Phi Beta Kappa
A chapter of the national scholarship honor society. Phi
Beta Kappa, was established at Pomona College, March sev-
enth, 1914. Upper classmen "who are of good moral char-
acter, who are candidates for the degree of Bachelor of Arts,
and who are distinguished for breadth of culture and excel-
lence of scholarship," are eligible to membership.
Oratorical and Debating Contests
Many opportunities are offered students for obtaining ex-
perience in public address. The Associated Students main-
tain three oratorical contests, the winners of which represent
the College in intercollegiate competition and there are each
year college and freshman intercollegiate debates. A Wom-
en's Oratorical Contest for upperclass women is conducted
by the College. The aim of these contests is to stimulate
the students to excellence in public address, and to quickness
of thought in extemporaneous speaking.
Student Activities
The Associated Students. This association harmonizes
all student activities. Its officers are chosen by the student
body from their own number. All important questions are
ANNUAL REGISTER 29
considered by its executive committee, which is composed of
those prominent in such varied lines as athletics, oratory,
and the editorship of the Student Life. This body has charge
of intercollegiate as well as inter-class relations.
Men's Organization. The men of the student body
form a voluntary organization electing their own officers and
committees and holding regular meetings. This organization
controls largely the class and social relations of the men.
Women's Organization. The women of the student body
form a similar organization, for considering and regulating
the social relations of the women.
Christian Associations. Branches of the Young Men's
Christian Association and the Young Women's Christian
Association are well organized and doing effective work.
Representation in the inter-collegiate and state conventions
and the visits of active workers from outside serve to main-
tain interest in the work both at home and abroad. Through
the co-operation of the associations and the College there
have been established, as a part of the curriculum, courses
in Bible study adapted to all classes of students and con-
ducted by members of the Faculty. Volunteer classes for
the study of missionary movements constitute another phase
of the work which is of special value. Large delegations
attend the annual inter-collegiate conferences.
The Pomona College Literary Society, composed of
both men and women, meets every two weeks. The work is
varied in character, covering all literary lines.
The Pomona College Debating Club is composed of men.
It meets every two weeks for prepared and impromptu de-
bates on the live issues of the day.
The Alpha Kappa is a society for women, giving drill in
debates and familiarity with important current topics.
The Pomona College Lyceum, composed of men, is also
a debating club, and meets bi-weekly.
The Areopagus is composed of men. The object of the
30 POMONA COLLEGE
society is to promote efficiency in public speaking, debate,
and parliamentary drill. Meetings are held every two weeks.
The Delta Lambda is a debating society for women, meet-
ing bi-weekly.
The Masquers is an organization of students, whose pur-
pose is the study and presentation of plays and the general
promotion of the dramatic enterprises of the undergraduate
body.
Publications. The Student Life is published semi-weekly
by the student body. One issue of each month consists of
a magazine number, The Scribbler; the other issues are de-
voted to current affairs.
The Metate is published each year by the Junior class, and
contains material appropriate to a college annual.
The Association Hand Book, which contains material of
value, especially to new students, is issued at the beginning
of the year by the Christian Associations.
Athletics. The immediate management of all contests
and games rests with the Associated Students, though all
arrangements are under the supervision of a committee of
the Faculty and a student manager.
Alumni Field, consisting of about ten acres, has been
developed by the alumni into athletic grounds unsurpassed
in the Southwest in equipment and beauty of setting. First-
class tennis courts, an excellent track, baseball and football
fields, also hockey and basket ball courts are within the
limits of the campus, and athletic exercises and field sports
are encouraged by the officers of the institution.
A swimming pool, of the standard size for water polo, and
fully equipped with modern appliances, is open to all stu-
dents. An invariable condition to the use of the pool is a
semi-annual medical examination.
Students are required to maintain a certain standard of
excellence in all their studies in order to represent the Col-
lege on any of its athletic teams or other organizations com-
ing before the public.
ANNUAL REGISTER 31
Departmental Activities
The Choral Union is an organization of students and
members of the community for drill in choral work. It
meets each Thursday evening for practice under the direc-
tion of the Department of Music, and twice each year gives
a public concert.
The Pomona College Glee Club, the Pomona College
Women's Glee Club, the Pomona College Orchestra, and the
Pomona College Band are flourishing organizations under
the general direction of the Department of Music.
The Eembrandt Club is an organization of students and
members of the community which meets once a month for
art study, programs on art subjects, and social intercourse.
The Astronomical Society aims to help the observatory
in its work, in building up its library and in the issuing of
its publications. The associate membership is drawn from
the alumni and friends of the College, while the active mem-
bership includes the students of astronomy together with
members of the faculty and resident graduates.
The Biological Seminar. The aim of the Biological
Seminar is chiefly the review and discussion of recent and
important researches as published in the biological journals.
Membership is limited to students of the Junior and Senior
classes chosen for excellent scholarship and marked interest
in the work of the department, who meet every two weeks
with the faculty of the Biological Department.
The Mathematical Society. The Society of Mathematics
and Physical Science meets every month for presentation
and discussion of results of study and investigation in the
physical sciences and mathematics. It is open to advanced
students who are interested in these subjects and who agree
to take an active part in its work.
The Science Club. The Biological Seminar, the Mathe-
mathical Society and the active membership of the Astro-
nomical Society constitute three sections of the Science Club,
32 POMONA COLLEGE
which holds open meetings bi-monthly. Its programs are of
general scientific interest and its meetings are open to stu-
dents and public.
The Literature Seminar. The purpose of the Literature
Seminar is the presentation from a graduate or professional
point of view of those masterpieces of literature which have
dominated the content and form of other literature. The
meetings are monthly and are open to students and com-
munity.
Der Deutsche Verein is composed of those who have
had at least three years of work in German. It meets every
two weeks for the reading and discussing of papers in Ger-
man and for other exercises which tend to cultivate fluency
and accuracy in the use of the language.
Le Cercle Francais, composed of students making a
specialty of the French language, meets fortnightly for prac-
tice in French conversation, presentation of papers and dis-
cussion of topics relating to the various aspects of French
life and literature.
El Circulo Espanol, composed of students making a
specialty of Spanish, meets fortnightly for practice in Span-
ish conversation and the presentation of appropriate papers
in the language, bearing upon the literature and life of the
Spanish world.
College Publications
Most of the publications of the College appear in The
Pomona College Bulletin, which is issued bi-monthly, and
include :
1. The Annual Announcement of the officers and teachers
for the ensuing year, with requirements for admission, de-
scription of courses and general information. Published in
May.
2. The Annual Register of officers, teachers and students
for the current year. Published in March.
ANNUAL REGISTER 33
3. The Annual Directory of officers, teachers and stu-
dents. Published in October.
4. The Register of Graduates.
5. The Register of Non-graduates.
6. The Report of the President.
Alumni and departmental publications include:
The Pomona College Qttar-terlij Magazine, devoted to the
interests of the College and Alumni.
The Journal of Entomology and Zoology, published under
the auspices of the Department of Zoology.
The Pomona College Journal of Economic Botany, pub-
lished under the auspices of the Department of Botany.
The Publication of the Astronomical Society of Pomona
College, published under the auspices of the Department of
Astronomy.
Bureau of Appointments
A Bureau of Appointments is conducted in connection with
the office of the Secretary of the Faculty for the benefit of
members of the College who desire to teach after graduation.
The purpose of the Bureau is to maintain a list of available
positions and to recommend from the applicants registered
those who are qualified for specific positions.
An opportunity is also offered graduates of the College
who are already engaged in teaching, to register their pres-
ent positions and to indicate whether they desire a change
and, if so, under what conditions. An effort is made to
further the desires of graduates so far as made known. The
services of the Bureau are entirely gratuitous. Communi-
cations should be addressed to Professor M. E. Churchill,
Secretary of the Faculty.
Registration
Informal Registration — Prospective Students. All who
desire to enter Pomona College should file their applications
with the Registrar as early as possible. These applications
34 POMONA COLLEGE
should specify the class which the applicant desires to enter,
the time when he wishes to enter, and the work he offers
for entrance as well as for advanced credit if any. The
statement of work done must be certified to by the proper
officer. Specially prepared blanks for these applications may
be obtained from the Registrar. In 1915 the freshman class
will be limited to two hundred students, one hundred men
and one hundred women.
Resident SUiclents. On or before the first Thursday in
January and the first Thursday in .June all resident students
must fill out, in consultation with their class advisers, a pre-
liminary registration schedule designating their choice of
subjects for the following semester. A fee of one dollar
must be paid for any subsequent change.
Formal Registration. 1. All students are required to
register formally on one of the regularly announced registra-
tion days preceding the opening of the class work of each
semester. A payment of two dollars is required for later
registration, and a payment of one dollar for every change
in formal registration. This latter payment is remitted in
the case of new students registering for the first time, pro-
vided the changes are made within a week of the opening-
day of the registration period.
2. Students are admitted only to those courses for which
they are formally registered.
Reports
A record of the scholarship and deportment of each stu-
dent is kept, and deficient students are reported to the Reg-
istrar. Special reports are made at or near the Thanks-
giving and Spring recesses and notification is sent to the
parents of any students reported as conditioned or failing
at that time.
The grade of scholarship is determined by the daily work
of the class-room supplemented by frequent test reviews and
by final examinations.
ANNUAL REGISTER 35
The aim is to encoui'age faithfulness and regulai'ity in
daily work rather than spasmodic effort to meet some single
test.
Public Assemblies
Devotional exercises conducted by the President, the mem-
bers of the faculty in turn, or by some invited guest, are
held in the chapel every week-day morning, except Saturday,
and all students are expected to be present.
An hour is reserved each Thursday afternoon for a gen-
eral gathering of faculty and students in which various
phases of college life and interest are presented. Opportunity
is given at this time for addresses by invited guests or mem-
bers of the faculty, for meetings of the Associated Students,
and, in general, for the presentation and discussion of any
matter of common interest.
Attendance upon the Sunday morning service in the Clare-
mont Church is expected except in cases where permission
is given to attend services elsewhere. Such permission will
be granted on request.
General Requirements
Students are expected to be loyal to the spirit and purpose
of the institution and to maintain regular attendance on all
college appointments. Any who fall below grade in scholar-
ship, or who for any reason do not prove desirable members
of the student body, may be dismissed without specific
charges.
It is urgently pointed out to both students and parents
that the value of a college education consists in no small
degree in the fullest participation in the college atmosphere
and life. It is important, therefore, that all absence through
the college year should be avoided. Some of the most im-
portant of the college values are lost by absences on Satur-
day and Sunday, on which days are centered particular and
36 FOMONA COLLEGE
vital phases of the common life, and it is therefore urged
that over-Sunday visits at home or elsewhere be avoided.
The use of tobacco is disapproved and discouraged at all
times.
A copy of the Manual of Procedure may be obtained by
application to the Registrar. It should be in the hands of
all students.
Student Aid
Scholarship Funds. The income of certain funds is used
toward paying the tuition fees of students who are in
pecuniary need, and, by authorization of the trustees, is dis-
tributed annually through a committee of the faculty.
Scholarship aid is given only to students who are or intend
to become candidates for a degree from Pomona College,
who maintain a high standard of honor, who are economical
in their habits, who do not use tobacco, who are regular in
their attendance upon college exercises, and whose scholar-
ship meets the following conditions: They must earn in
each semester of the Freshman year at least twelve credits;
in each subsequent semester at least fifteen credits.
Applicants for aid who have not yet entered college should
forward to the Dean of the College, E. C. Norton, a formal
application accompanied by two letters, one from parent or
guardian and the other from principal or teacher, giving
information concerning need, character and attainments.
They should also send a certified statement of their scho-
lastic record. All applications for aid must be renewed
annually on or before May first.
Aid may be withdrawn at any time from students who
prove not to have conformed to the conditions, and is perma-
nently withdrawn after the second forfeiture due to low
standing or unsatisfactory deportment.
Recipients of scholarship aid may be called upon to assist
the College in ways that do not interfere with their studies.
$4,000. The Lydia Phelps Memorial Fund, given by
ANNUAL REGISTER 37
Hiram E. Phelps of Ontario, California, in memory of his
wife.
$1,000. The Agnes K. Crawford Memorial Fund, given
by David R. Crawford and William Crawford of Pomona,
California, in memory of their mother.
$2,000. The John D. Potter Memorial Fund, given by
Mrs. S. T. Potter of Westboro, Mass., in memory of her
husband.
$5,000. Given by Mrs. Loraine H. Page of Pomona, Cali-
fornia. ($3,000 of this may at some time be used for other
purposes.)
$1,500. The Francis Bancroft Memorial Fund, given by
Mrs. James T. Ford of Los Angeles, California, in memory
of her father.
$2,500. Given by Rev. James T. Ford of Los Angeles,
California.
$2,500. Given by Mrs. Maria T. Wardwell of Plymouth,
Connecticut.
$1,000. The Henry Herbert Brown Scholarship Fund,
given by Mrs. Fannie E. Brown of Los Angeles, California,
in memory of her son.
$2,600. Given by Mary E. Elwood of Redlands, Cali-
fornia.
$3,500. The Mabel S. Bridges Memorial Scholarship,
given by Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Bridges of San Diego, Califor-
nia, in memory of their daughter. Available for women.
$1,000. The H. G. Billings Memorial Scholarship, given
by Mrs. E. A. Billings of Los Angeles, California, in mem-
ory of her husband.
$2,000. The Thomas F. Howard Memorial Scholarship,
given by Dr. and Mrs. H. G. Brainerd of Los Angeles, Cali-
fornia, in memory of Mrs. Brainerd's father.
$1,200. Given by Miss Jean Loomis, '97, of Pasadena,
California.
$1,800. Given by Dr. Anna H. Searing of Escondido,
California.
38 POMONA COLLEGE
The Bristol Memorial Fund. A fund raised as a
memorial to the Reverend Sherlock Bristol.
Self-Support. a committee of the faculty endeavors to
find employment for students needing to earn a part of their
expenses. Many are thus helping themselves by various
forms of labor such as janitor work, waiting on tables at the
Commons, general house work, gardening and the like. The
most desirable positions are in general secured by upper-
classmen who have proven themselves good workers and
good students, and those coming to the College for the first
time should be content if any work which they can satis-
factorily do is secured for them. Students in any case should
come prepared to pay all bills for at least one semester.
Their record during this semester will be a large factor in
deciding what opportunities for self-help will be open to
them. Applications for aid in securing employment should
be addressed to Professor F. H. White, the chairman of the
Committee on Student Aid and Labor.
Physical Attention
The physical care of students is a matter of special con-
cern to the College and the advantages of unusual attention
and opportunity are offered. The climate of Southern Cali-
fornia offers an out-of-door life the year around. Oversight
is given to open-air athletics in all seasons. A regular
physician is on the faculty of the College. Every student
on entering has a physical examination. Regular work in
Physical Culture is prescribed throughout the course. A
large swimming pool is provided, access to which is free to
all students, subject only to a semi-annual physical exami-
nation. The College physician gives courses in Physiology
and Hygiene and his medical advice is ordinarily available
free of charge to all students subject to certain conditions
of hours and location of residence, the College meeting these
bills; providing that all nursing, surgical dressing, and
medicines are at the expense of the ill or injured. The
ANNUAL REGISTER 39
College, however, reserves the right to discontinue this in-
dividual medical service at any time without previous notice.
As a natural result of all this attention the health of the
College is such as to give special assurance to all consider-
ing attendance at Pomona.
Expenses
EooMS. Lists and descriptions of rooms available for men
students are kept at the Business office, for women students
at Sumner Hall. Furnished rooms outside the College build-
ings are rented at prices ranging from twenty to forty-five
dollars for the semester. Students are permitted to room
only at places approved by the faculty.
To avoid misunderstanding between students and house-
holders, it is advised that agreements regarding rooms be
put in written form. Unless written agreement to the con-
trary is made, it will be assumed that rooms are rented for
one semester.
Change of rooms is made only by permission of the faculty.
Dormitories — Sumner Hall. Women not living in their
own homes, unless excused by the faculty, are expected to
room in Sumner Hall, which accommodates seventy. This
is a commodious and pleasant hall, where the young women
come under the direct care of the Dean of Women. In addi-
tion to the parlors, which are open to the students for the
reception of their friends, there is also on the first floor a
large and attractive recreation hall.
Sumner Hall is well equipped with all modern conven-
iences, including electric lights, stea.m heat, baths, and a
laundry furnished with stationary tubs and electric irons
for the use of roomers.
There are both single and double rooms, which are well
lighted and ventilated. Each room is provided with the
necessary furnishings, including rug for the floor. The
only articles to be supplied by the students are towels and
linen and covers for a single bed.
40 POMONA COLLEGE
Careful attention is given to the health of the young
women residing in the Hall. Illness is rare, yet for such
cases as occur, there is provided, opening directly from the
matron's room, a pleasant, sunny rest-room, where patients
are given the best of care.
Rooms in Sumner Hall are rented for the year at prices
ranging from forty to seventy dollars, according to the loca-
tion and desirability of the room and the number of occu-
pants. The Hall is closed during the Christmas and Spring
vacations. A deposit of five dollars is necessary to secure
a room in the Hall, and should accompany the application.
Rooms are assigned in order of application. The deposit
fee is credited on the rent of the room.
Information concerning the dimensions of rooms, number
of windows, and similar matters, may be obtained at the
business office. The Hall is opened on the Saturday before
the beginning of the college year and closed the Saturday
after Commencement.
Smiley Hall. A dormitory for men, has both single rooms
and suites of three rooms accommodating two students. The
dormitory has all modern conveniences and is completely fur-
nished. The only articles to be provided by the students are
towels, and linen and covers for a single bed. All rooms are
equally desirable, the basis of choice in most cases being one's
preference for the eastern or western outlook.
Rooms in Smiley Hall are rented for the college year, each
occupant paying sixty dollars. In case of withdrawal be-
cause of sickness an equitable adjustment of rent will be
made.
These terms do not include the use of the dormitory dur-
ing the Christmas and Spring vacations, when the Hall will
be closed, unless a number desire to remain, in which case
the cost of keeping the building open will be an additional
charge. Damage to rooms will be charged to the occupants.
A deposit of five dollars is necessary to secure a room, and
should accompany the application. The amount is credited
on the year's rent. The dormitory is opened on the Saturday
ANNUAL REGISTER 41
before the beginning of the college year and closed the Satur-
day after Commencement.
The College reserves the right to dismiss from the dormi-
tory without rebate any student who has shown himself a
disturbing or undesirable occupant.
Board. Provision is made for the boarding of students at
the College Commons, an unusually attractive and well-
equipped dining room in the Claremont Inn. An entertain-
ment committee of students provides music and other fea-
tures that add to the enjoyment of the meal time. The
rates are the lowest consistent with good quality of food and
efficient service, varying from $18 to $22 per month.
The Pomona College spirit is due in no small measure to
its common dining hall. There the students meet in pleas-
ant surroundings, are waited upon by companions in study,
discuss together college topics, join in enthusiastic backing
of college teams and glee clubs and have favorable opportu-
nities for forming close and lasting friendships. For these
reasons and for its unifying influence on college life, the
faculty regard it as exceedingly desirable that students
should board at the Commons.
Those wishing to board at other approved places may do
so by permission of the faculty, but such permission will
rarely be given to those living in college buildings.
Summary of Expenses — The necessary expense for the
college year, exclusive of fees for special courses and ex-
penses which are purely personal, varies from $275 to $400.
Bills are due each semester in advance and must be paid
upon registration. If parents desire bills to be sent home,
written request should be made before the beginning of a
semester.
No student will be retained in the institution or given
honorable dismissal whose bills are not paid or arranged for.
42 POMONA COLLEGE
Tuition
All tuition bills must be paid at the beginning of each
semester. Until this has been done cards entitling the stu-
dent to admission to classes will not be issued.
The regular charge for tuition is composed of two items;
a General Charge, uniform in amount, which is required of
all students, and an Instruction Charge, varying with the
amount of work taken.
GENERAL CHARGE
Required of all students, per semester (18 weeks) ....$15.00
INSTRUCTION CHARGE
In all branches there is a further Instruction Charge vary-
ing according to the number of Credit Hours assigned to
each course. The normal amount of work varies from 16
to 18 hours.
For each hour taken, per semester (18 weeks) $2.00
ADDITIONAL CHARGE FOR APPLIED MUSIC
AND ART
In addition to the General Charge and the Instruction
Charge, students taking Applied Music or Art will pay an
Additional Charge as follows:
For half-hour private lessons in piano, voice, organ
or violin, per semester:
Advanced instruction, two lessons each week $50.00
Advanced instruction, one les;son each week 25.00
Elementary instruction, two lessons each week.... 36.00
Elementary instruction, one lesson each week 18.00
For two-hour class lessons in Art, per semester:
Two lessons each week 20.00
One lesson each week 10.00
Pen and Ink, one lesson each week for 9 weeks.... 5.00
Sketch Class 1.00
Students may register for applied music and art at any
time. Such students, if they enter during a semester, should
consult the Registrar as to charges.
ANNUAL REGISTER 43
Fees
Diploma fee, $5.00.
Physics and Chemistry, deposit for breakage, $5.00.
Laboratory fees range from $4.00 to $15.00. The exact
fee for a given course is stated in connection with the
description of that course under Departments of Instruc-
tion; in advanced courses only does it exceed $10.00.
The fees for the use of college pianos for practice
are as follows:
One hour a day for a semester $ 4.50
Two hours a day for a semester 8.25
Three hours a day for a semester 11.25
RETURN OF TUITION
The General Charge of $15.00 is retained from the tuition
of students withdrawing within two weeks subsequent to
the lirst day of registration of any semester. After that
time there is no refunding of any part of the tuition either
for courses dropped or for failure to complete a semester's
residence, except that one half of the Instruction Charge
and of the Additional Charge, if any, is refunded to any
leaving college before the middle of any semester on account
of illness.
Requirements for Admission
General Requirements and Methods of
Admission
It is the purpose of Pomona College to do a distinctly
and notably high grade of work, thus preparing its grad-
uates for special distinction in such later callings as they
may choose. To this end the College wishes to receive only
such students as are thoroughly prepared to enter upon
college work. Students planning to enter Pomona College
should indicate their purpose to the Registrar of the College
as early as possible. The College is prepared to give advice
and cooperation to prospective students several years in
advance of their actual entrance upon college work in order
that they may have the most thorough and complete prep-
aration. Students should not leave the matter of their
formal application for admission until the entrance day of
the year, as the College authorities will carefully scrutinize
all applications for admission, and delay in filing applications
will inevitably involve delay in acceptance. Only two hun-
dred freshmen, one hundred men and one hundred women,
will be received in 1915.
Candidates for admission to any class in Pomona College
must present satisfactory evidence of their fitness for college
both in character and in scholarship. Testimonials of good
moral character and a certificate of honorable dismissal from
the last institution attended are required. A medical ex-
amination conducted by an authorized physician, under the
direction of the Department of Physical Education, is re-
quired of all students. Evidence of satisfactory scholarship
and of the completion of the required amount of study as
indicated in the following pages may be given in one of
three ways:
First: Examination by the College.
Students wishing to remove deficiencies by examination
ANNUAL REGISTER 45
must do so before entering upon college work. Such ex-
aminations must be taken during the first three days of
registration week of either semester or (by special arrange-
ment) the week preceding the college commencement. They
must be arranged for in advance through the Registrar.
Second: Certificate of the College Entrance Examina-
tion Board.
Examinations are given by the College Entrance Exam-
ination Board at certain times and places which may be
learned from the Registrar or from principals of secondary
schools. These examinations for Southern California will
be given in 1915 at Pomona College.
Third : Certificate from approved schools or colleges.
Students from approved schools or colleges are admitted
without examination on presentation of a certificate signed
by the principal or proper official and showing in detail the
requisite completed courses. Certificate blanks obtained
from the Registrar should be filled out and returned as
early as possible after the completion of the high school year.
Requirements for Matriculation
The standing of all students is provisional until after
they have been in residence for one semester. At that time
those are matriculated who have shown themselves in accord
with the spirit of the College, who have done a satisfactory
quality of work during their semester of residence and v7hos3
entrance units have been accepted.
Admission to Freshman Standing
The number of students admitted to the freshman class
is limited to two hundred — one hundred men and one hun-
dred women; early application is therefore advised. Special
blanks for this purpose may be had by addressing the
Registrar. Applications are listed in the order of their
receipt, are considered individually, and in every case must
46 POMONA COLLEGE
be accompanied by a certification both as to scholarship and
character. No application is considered which does not
show fifteen units in accepted subjects, at least ten of which
are recommended. Special endorsement by the Principal
must accompany all papers showing non-commended units,
such endorsement to include the specific recommendation of
the candidate, both as to character and ability, for the under-
taking of college work. Not later than the first of July
a notification is sent to those whose credentials are satis-
factory and from time to time other applicants are so noti-
fied. No applicant, however, is finally enrolled among those
definitely accepted, until the sum of $15 has been deposited
with the Registrar as a first payment on tuition. This sum
is returned upon request received before the first of Sep-
tember, but not thereafter.
Those are matriculated to full standing who at the end of
a semester's residence meet the requirements stated just
above; those who do not meet those requirements are not
allowed to matriculate and are enrolled as in partial stand-
ing. No student in partial standing is recommended to
college standing in another institution. The final acceptance
of entrance units is based upon the character of the work
done in class at Pomona College as well as upon the grade
of the units presented.
Admission to Advanced Standing
Students who have sufficient credit from other institu-
tions are admitted to advanced standing on credentials signed
by the proper officials and giving full specifications concern-
ing the nature of the courses taken, the time spent in each,
together with their rank in each subject. They are assigned
hours and credits* on the basis of their credentials, but such
assignment is provisional until ratified by the Classification
Committee. This ratification is not given until after the
♦Credits are based upon the grades attained in tlie worlv offered.
See page 54.
ANNUAL REGISTER 47
required semester's residence, at which time the Committee
has power to act in adjusting hours or credits, or both, to
the qualifications shown.
Admission as Special Students
Mature students, ordinarily only such as are at least
twenty-one years of age, may be admitted as special students
to courses for which by ability and preparation they may be
fitted. Special students are not candidates for a degree.
Credits for Non-Commended Work
Students who enter with some of their work non-com-
mended may remove their deficiency in one of three ways —
by examination, by continuing the same line of study in
college with high grade or by extra work in college not
counted towards a degree. These three methods are more
fully described as follows:
First: Students may be examined upon any of the ac-
cepted subjects presented for entrance, and upon passing
with B grade receive credit toward entrance for that subject.
Such examinations must be taken as specified on page 44.
Second: Entrance credit will be given for non-com-
mended work after a student has completed with A grade
two or more college courses in the same or a closely allied
subject, or upon conditions laid down in individual cases by
the Classification Committee.
Third: Entrance credit may be gained by v^^ork in cer-
tain college courses, but such courses cannot count toward
the number of hours or credits required for graduation, nor
for honors. Moreover, students may not substitute for sub-
jects specifically required for entrance other subjects taken
in this way.
Students are not candidates for a degree nor are they
eligible for recommendation to college standing in another
institution until they have matriculated. Students are
48 POMONA COLLEGE
matriculated only after they have come into full standinj;.
All students must be matriculated before r.ttaining to Ju.:ior
standing.
Courses Required for Admission to Freshman
Standing
In the following outline of courses a "unif'represents a
course of study in one subject of high school grade involving
five forty-five minute recitations per week or an equivalent
for a school year. Laboratory periods should be at least
twice the length of recitation periods.
Not less than one unit in any subject is normally accepted,
though a half unit may be accepted when accompanied by
units for courses in allied subjects.
I. Specific Requirements — 8 units
English, 2 units Algebra, 1 unit
History, i unit Geometry, 1 unit
One foreign language, *One third or fourth year lab-
2 units oratory science, i unit
II. Additional Requirements — A units
Selected from the following:
English Mathematics
History * Laboratory Science
Foreign Language
III. Elective — 3 units
It is recommended that these electives be chosen from the
subjects of Group II above, but in view of the importance of
other lines of high school work credit is allowed for full
units in other courses counted for high school graduation the
acceptance of which is specifically recommended by the prin-
cipal of the school.
* Heads of Departments in whicli students wish to continue
laboratory subjects begun in higli school may, at their option, re-
quire the liig-h school note books to be submitted as evidence of
al)ility to continue with more advanced work in the department.
ANNUAL REGISTER 49
Description of Subjects
The College recommends that the work offered to meet
the requirements of Groups I and II above shall cover the
ground indicated in the following description of courses.
Each of them constitutes one unit unless otherwise desig-
nated.
Elementary English.
Rhetoric, composition and literature. (2 units.)
Intermediate English.
Advanced English.
The following list is made the basis of examination. A
indicates books selected for careful reading; B those requir-
ing close study.
A. From each o" the following groups at least two selec-
tions are to be made, except as otherwise provided under
Group I.
Group I — Classics in Translation
The Old Testament, comprising at least the chief narra-
tive episodes in Genesis, Exodus, Joshua, Judges, Samuel,
Kings, and Daniel, together with the books of Ruth and
Esther; the Odyssey, with the omission, if desired, of Books
i-v and xv-xvii; the Iliad, with the omission, if desired, of
Books xi, xiii-xv, xvii, and xxi; the Aeneid. The Odyssey,
Iliad, and Aeneid should be read in English translations of
recognized literary excellence.
For any selection from this group a selection from any
other group may be substituted.
Group II — Shakespeare
Midsummer Night's Dream; Merchant of Venice; As You
Like It; Twelfth Night; The Tempest; Romeo and Juliet;
King John; Richard II; Richard III; Henry V; Coriolanus;
and the following, if not chosen for study under B, Julius
Csesar; Macbeth; Hamlet.
Group III — Prose Fiction
Malory's Morte d'Arthur (about 100 pages) ; Bunyan's
Pilgrim's Progress, Part I; Swift's Gulliver's Travels (voy-
ages to Lilliput and to Brobdingnag) ; Defoe's Robinson
Crusoe, Part I; Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield; Frances
Burney's Evelina; Scott's Novels, any one; Jane Austen's
Novels, any one; Maria Edgeworth's Castle Rackrent, or
50 POMONA COLLEGE
The Absentee; Dickens's Novels, any one; Thackeray's Nov-
els, any one; George Eliot's Novels, any one; Mrs. Gaskell's
Cranford; Kingsley's Westward Ho! or Hereward, the
Wake; Reade's The Cloister and the Hearth; Blackmore's
Lorna Doone; Hughes's Tom Brown's Schooldays; Steven-
son's Treasure Island, or Kidnapped, or Master of Ballan-
trae; Cooper's Novels, any one; Poe's Selected Tales; Haw-
thorne's The House of the Seven Gables, or Twice Told Tales,
or Mosses from an Old Manse; a collection of Short Stories
by various standard writers.
Group IV — Essays, Biography, Etc.
Addison and Steele's The Sir Roger de Coverley Papers,
or Selections from the Tatler and Spectator (about 200
pages) ; Boswell's Selections from the Life of Johnson (about
200 pages) ; Franklin's Autobiography; Irving's Sketch Book
(about 200 pages), or Life of Goldsmith; Southey's Life of
Nelson; Lamb's Essays of Elia (about 100 pages); Lock-
hart's Life of Scott (about 200 pages) ; Thackeray's Lec-
tures on Swift, Addison, and Steele in the English Humor-
ists; Macaulay's Lord Clive, Warren Hastings, Milton, Ad-
dison, Goldsmith, Frederic the Great, Madame d'Arblay,
(any one) ; Trevelyan's Life of Macaulay (about 200 pages) ;
Ruskin's Sesame and Lilies, or Selections (about 150 pages) ;
Dana's Two Years before the Mast; Selections from Lincoln,
including at least the two Inaugurals, the Speeches in Inde-
pendence Hall and at Gettysburg, the Last Public Address,
and the Letter to Horace Greely, together with a brief me-
moir or estimate of Lincoln ; Parkman's The Oregon Trail ;
Thoreau's Walden; Lowell's Selected Essays (about 150
pages) ; Holmes's The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table;
Stevenson's An Inland Voyage and Travels with a Donkey;
Huxley's Autobiography and selections from Lay Sermons,
including the addresses on Improving Natural Knowledge,
A Liberal Education, and A Piece of Chalk; a collection of
Essays by Bacon, Lamb, DeQuincey, Hazlitt, Emerson, and
later writers; a collection of Letters by various standard
writers.
Group V — Poetry
Palgrave's Golden Treasury (First Series) : Books II and
III, with special attention to Dryden, Collins, Gray, Cowper,
and Burns; Palgrave's Golden Treasury (First Series), Book
IV, with special attention to Wordsworth, Keats, and Shel-
ley (if not chosen for study under B) ; Goldsmith's The
Traveller and The Deserted Village; Pope's The Rape of
the Lock; a collection of English and Scottish Ballads, as,
ANNUAL REGISTER 51
for example, some Robin Hood ballads, The Battle of Otter-
burn, King Estmere, Young Beichan, Bewick and Grahame,
Sir Patrick Spens, and a selection from later ballads; Cole-
ridge's The Ancient Mariner, Christabel, and Kubla Khan;
Byron's Childe Harold, Canto III or IV, and The Prisoner
of Chillon; Scott's The Lady of the Lake, or Marmion;
Macaulay's The Lays of Ancifent Rome, The Battle of Nase-
by. The Armada, Ivry ;Tennyson's The Princess, or Gareth
and Lynette, Lancelot and Elaine, and The Passing of
Arthur ; Browning's Cavalier Tunes, The Lost Leader, How
They Brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix, Home
Thoughts from Abroad, Home Thoughts from the Sea, In-
cidents of the French Camp, Herve Riel, Pheidippides, My
Last Duchess, Up at a Villa — Down in a City, The Italian
in England, The Patriot, The Pied Piper, "De Gustibus" — ,
Instans Tyi-annus; Arnold's Sohrab and Rustum, and The
Forsaken Merman ; Selections from American Poetry, with
special attention to Poe, Lowell, Longfellow, and Whittier.
B. This part of the requirement is intended as a natural
and logical continuation of the student's earlier reading,
with greater stress laid upon form and style, the exact mean-
ing of words and phrases, and the understanding of allu-
sions. The books provided for study are arranged in four
groups, from each of which one selection is to be made.
Group I — Drama
Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, or Macbeth, or Hamlet.
Group II — Poetry
Milton's L'Allegro, II Penseroso, and either Comus or Ly-
cidas; Tennyson's The Coming of Arthur, The Holy Grail,
and The Passing of Arthur; the selections from Words-
worth, Keats, and Shelley in Book IV of Palgrave's Golden
Treasury (First Series).
Group III — Oratory
Burke's Speech on Conciliation with America; Macaulay's
Two Speeches on Copyright, and Lincoln's Speech at Cooper
Union; Washington's Farewell Address, and Webster's First
Bunker Hill Oration.
Group IV — Essays
Carlyle's Essay on Burns, with a selection from Burns's
Poems ; Macaulay's Life of Johnson ; Emerson's Essay on
Manners.
Ancient History to the Coronation of Charlemagne with
52 POMONA COLLEGE
special reference to the history of Greece and Rome. (My-
er's Ancient History or Equivalent.)
Medieval and Modern History, a year's work based on a
text-book, but including reference reading and note-book
work. (Myer's Middle Ages and Myer's Modern Age or
equivalent.)
English History, including text, reference and note-book
work for one year (Andrews's History of England or
equivalent.)
United States History and Civil Government. (Chan-
ning's Students' History and Ashley's Federal State or
equivalent.)
Greek lessons and grammar.
Xenophon, four books of the Anabasis, and composition.
Homer, three books of the Hiad, with prosody; ability to
read easy Greek at sight.
Latin lessons and grammar.
Caesar, Commentaries (Books I-IV).
Cicero, seven orations, including those against Catiline and
for the poet Archias, and the Manilian Law.
Virgil, six books of the Aeneid and prosody.
Grammar, composition and sight reading are required as
a portion of each year's work.
Elementary French. One year of French; elements of
grammar; ability to write at dictation and to translate from
English ; reading of about one hundred and fifty pages of
text.
Intermediate French. Additional work in French, amount-
ing to one year's advanced work in translation and com-
position.
Advanced French. The ability to read at sight any piece
of modern prose or poetry and to write in French a paper
on an assigned subject.
Elementary German. One year of German, elements of
grammar; ability to write at dictation and to translate from
English ; reading of about one hundred and fifty pages of
text.
Intermediate German. Additional work in German,
amounting to one year's advanced work in translation and
composition.
Advanced German. The ability to read at sight any piece
of modern German prose of moderate difficulty and to write
in German a paper on an assigned topic.
Spanish (1 or 2 units). Including an accurate knowledge
of the essentials of grammar, ability to write ordinary
Spanish and to read ordinary Spanish prose.
ANNUAL REGISTER 53
Elements of Algebra, with special attention to factoring
and solution of equations, and including ratio and proportion.
Algebra (^a unit), being a continuation of the course in
the elements of Algebra with special emphasis on algebraic
theory.
Algebra {V2 unit). Quadratics and indeterminate equa-
tions, irrational and imaginary numbers, ratio, proportion
and variations, in review; also theory of exponents, progres-
sions, undetermined co-efficients and logarithms.
Plane Geometry, with original exercises and problems in
mensuration.
Solid Geometry iV2 unit). With original exercises and
problems.
Trigonometry {Vz unit). Elementary course in plane trig-
onometry.
Physics, covering an elementary knowledge of dynamics,
sound, light, heat, magnetism and electricity; recitation and
laboratory work.
Chemistry, including classroom and laboratory work in
the elements of chemistry as presented in modern standard
text-books on the subject. At least five exercises a week
for one year.
Physical Geography, covering the descriptive and explan-
atory study of the commoner phenomena of nature, includ-
ing satisfactory laboratory and field work.
Botany, covering the morphology and simpler physiology
of the higher plants, including some acquaintance with the
local flora.
Zoology, emphasizing, in a general course, scientific meth-
ods and training rather than facts.
Extra Entrance Credits
If by examination or by certificate, a student presents
m.ore than fifteen units of commended V\'ork for admission
he may, after the lapse of a semester and upon formal appli-
cation, receive college credit for certain subjects, provided
that these subjects, or others closely allied, have been con-
tinued in college with high grade, one unit of commended
work being allowed three hours of college credit. Extra
credit is thus allowed only in foreign language, advanced
mathematics and advanced science. Credit, varying in
amount with the individual courses, is granted for graduate
work in approved high schools.
Requirements for Graduation
Bachelor of Arts Degree
The courses of study offered by the College lead to the
degree of Bachelor of Arts.
These courses include certain required studies, but also
a wide range of electives in language and literature, phil-
osophy, economics, history, mathematics, science and fine
arts.
Hour Requirements
One hundred and twenty-six hours of work are required
for graduation. An "hour" consists of one recitation or
lecture period, or one laboratory period a week for one
semester. A recitation or lecture period covers fifty-five
minutes; a laboratory period covers, in general, the time of
three such periods. Six hours of the one hundred and twen-
ty-six are in Physical Education. In order to complete the
course in four years one must take an average of fifteen
hours of academic work per semester throughout the four
years.
Credit Requirements
In addition to the requirements of hours, as stated above,
there is required for promotion from class to class and for
graduation a certain number of "credits." These credits
may be earned in the following way: For each hour of AA
work, three credits are given; for each hour of A work, two
credits; for each hour of B work, one credit. For C work
no credit is given; for F work one credit per hour is de-
ducted, and for FF work, two credits. There are required
for advancement to Sophomore standing, twenty-four cred-
its; to Junior standing, fifty-four credits, and to Senior
standing, eighty-seven credits. There are required for
graduation Wfe, one hundred and twenty credits. No credits
are given for work in physical education.
ANNUAL REGISTER 55
Graduation With Honors
Those students who have two hundred and twenty-two
or more credits are graduated with the honor cum laude;
those who have two hundred and eighty-two or more credits
are graduated with the honor magna cum laude; and those
who have three hundred . and ten or more credits are grad-
uated with the honor sumvia cum laude.
Group Requirements
In the selection of his work the student is given a large
range of choice. The only limitations are such as will in-
sure to him, on the one hand, the breadth of view which
may be gained by an introductory study of each of the great
realms of knowledge; and, on the other, that concentration
along some chosen line of work which shall develop power
of thought and an actual fund of knowledge in some par-
ticular field. To this end the student will select a limited
amount of work from each of certain groups. Some of these
courses because of their value in mental training and as the
basis for later work are placed in the Freshman and Sopho-
more years.
Further details concerning these courses may be found
under "Departments of Instruction," in the May Bulletin.
Subject Requirements
English Composition — 4 hours. Freshman year.
English Literature — 6 hours, Freshman or Sophomore
year.
French or German — 12 hours. Freshman and Sophomore
years.
History — 6 hours. Freshman or Sophomore year, except
for those who enter with credit for three units of History.
Mathematics — 6 hours, ordinarily Freshman year, except
for those who enter with credit for three units of Mathe-
56 POMONA COLLEGE
matics. Such may substitute a year of chemistry or physics
for the required mathematics.
Physics, Chemistry, Zoology, Botany or Physiology — 6
hours, Freshman or Sophomore year. A student who enters
with only one unit of science must take 6 hours of another
line of science and, in general, it is expected that one will
take in college at least 6 hours in science in a different line
from any presented for entrance.
Physical Education — 4 hours in Freshman and Sopho-
more years and 2 hours in Junior and Senior years.
Literature, English or Foreign — 6 hours, Junior or Senior
year. This cannot be met by a first-year course in language.
Economics and Sociology — 6 hours, usually Sophomore or
Junior year.
Philosophy and Psychology — 6 hours, Sophomore and
Junior years.
In addition to these requirements, there is a general re-
quirement of 36 hours of C and D work of which at least
9 must be D work.
Students who have shown special ability in one line of
work may, with the consent of the head of the department,
enroll for a departmental major. This major includes,
usually, at least 18 hours in the department chosen, together
with certain courses in allied subjects, and usually a reading
knowledge of French and German. The student plans his
work in consultation with the head of the department as
well as with his class adviser. Certain prerequisites, differ-
ing with the subject chosen, are indicated for each major.
A final examination or thesis or both may be required.
Students who desire to become candidates for a depart-
mental major should indicate such intention as early as
possible, and must be registered as candidates for such de-
partmental major not later than the first week of registra-
tion in their Senior year.
The student who completes a departmental major receives
in addition to his diploma, the special commendation of the
department.
ANNUAL REGISTER 57
Curriculum
An outline of the work which leads to graduation is here
given by years. Following this scheme is a list of the definite
courses from which the work may be chosen. A more com-
plete description of each course may be found under "De-
partments of Instruction."
Each "hour" represents one recitation or laboratory period
per week for one semester.
Freshman Year
32 to 36 hours
Physical Education ! 2 hours
English Composition 4 hours
French or German ; 6 hours
History' or English Literature", or Greek, or Latin. ...6 hours
Mathematics' 6 hours
Elective from the above or from Art, Bible, Biology,
Chemistry, Engineering, English, Music or Physics.. 8 hours
Sophomore Year
32 to 36 hours
Physical Education 2 hours
French or German' 6 hours
English Literature' or History' 6 hours
Physics, Chemistry, Botany, Physiology or Zoology\...6 hours
Elective from the above or from Art, Bible, Engineer-
ing, Economics and Sociology', Mathematics, Music,
Psychology and Philosophy" or Spanish 12 hours
^Must be taken in Freshman or Sophomore year, unless 3 units
of History have been accepted for entrance.
-Must be taken in Freshman or Sophomore year.
'Must continue any language begim in Freshman year.
■•Unless the Science requirement was met Freshman year.
"Since 6 hours each of Economics and Sociology, and of Psychol-
ogy and Philosophy must be taken during the course, it is recom-
mended tliat one of these subjects be elected in Sophomore year,
''Physics or Chemistry may be substituted, if 3 units of Mathe-
matics have been presented for entrance.
58 POMONA COLLEGE
Junior and Senior Years
Physical Education 2 hours
Economics and Sociology' 6 hours
Philosophy and Psychology^ 6 hours
Literature" 6 hours
Elective^ 42 hours
^Unless already taken.
=Not including a first-year course in language.
^At least 9 hours being in D courses, and not over 6 in B courses.
List of Courses^
Open to Freshmen (and Sophomores)
Art Al and A2, Elementary Course (6).
Biblical Literature Al and A2, Contents of the Bible (2).
Biology AX-A2, General Biology (6).
Chemistry Al and A2, Elementary College Course (8).
A3 and A4, General Inorganic Chemistry (6).
B5 and B6, Qualitative Analysis (4).
Engineering Al and A2, Graphics (4).
English Al and A2, American Literature (6).
A21 and A22, Composition (4).
A34 and A35, Elementary Public Address (4).
French A1-A2, Elementary Course; Modern Prose and
Drama (8).
B3-C4, Nineteenth Century Novel (6).
BS'and C4', Composition (2).
German Al and A2, Elementary Course (8).
Bl' and B2', Composition (2).
B3, Prose Narrative and Drama (3).
B4 or B14, Schiller or Advanced German Prose (3).
B3' and B4', More Advanced Composition (2).
Greek Al and A2, Elementary Greek (8).
B3-B4, Lysias; Plato (6).
B3' and B4', Composition (2).
History A7-A8, English History (6).
A13 and A14, Ancient Classical (6).
Latin Al and A2, Elementary Latin (8).
A3 and A4, Vergil; Cicero (8).
B5-B6, Cicero and Livy; Horace (6).
B5' and B6', Composition (2).
*Courses connected by a dash may be tal\en separately.
Courses connected by "and" are to be taken consecutively.
ANNUAL REGISTER 59
Mathematics A1-A2, Solid Geometry; Plane Trigonometry
(6).
A3 and B4, Algebra (6).
A5 and A6, Elementary Analysis (6).
B7-B8, Analytic Geometry and Calculus (8).
Music Al and A2, Elementary Course (4).
Physical Education Al and A2, Gymnastics (2).
All and A12, Swedish Gymnastics (2).
B19 and B20, Folk and National Dances (2).
Physics B1-B2, Mechanics and Sound; Heat, Magnetism,
Electricity and Light (8).
List of Courses
Open to Sophomores (and Upperclassmen)
All B courses listed above and such A courses as are per-
mitted by classification adviser.
Art B3-B4, Still Life, Perspective, Composition (6).
Biblical Literature B3 and B4, Preservation and Transmis-
sion of the Bible (2).
B21 and B22, Ancient Oriental History and Liter-
ature ( 6 ) .
Botany B21-B22, General Botany (3).
Chemistry C7 and C8, Elementary Quantitative Analysis (6).
C9 and CIO, Organic Chemistry (6).
Economics Bl and B2, Introduction to Economics (6).
B21 and B22, Elements of Sociology (6).
Engineering B3 and B4, Graphics (4).
Cll and C12, Surveying (6).
English B3 and B4, History of English Literature (6).
B23, Composition (3).
B24, Composition (4).
B31, Argumentation (3).
B32, Public Address (3).
German C9-C10, Nineteenth Century Novel (6).
C9' and CIO', Composition and Conversation (2).
Greek B13 and B14, Greek Literature and Life (6).
C5-C6, Aeschylus and Sophocles; Demosthenes (6).
History B1-B2, Mediaeval ; the Renaissance and Reforma-
tion (6).
Latin C7-C8, Pliny; Plautus (6).
C7' and C8', More Advanced Composition (2).
Mathematics C13-C14, Analytic Geometry and Calculus (6).
C15-C16, Descriptive Geometry and Perspective (6).
C17 and C18, Advanced Analytic Geometry and Cal-
culus (8).
60 POMONA COLLEGE
Music B3 and B4, History and Appreciation (4).
B5 and B6, Harmony (6).
Philosophy B1-B2, Elements of Psychology (3).
B3 and C4, Principles of Psychology (6).
B21-B23 or B24, Logic and Ethics (6).
Physical Education B3 and B4, Gymnastics (2).
B13 and Bi4, Swedish Gymnastics (2).
B19 and B20, Folk and National Dances (2).
Physics C3-C4, Mechanics of Solids and Fluids, and Heat (6) .
Physiology B3 and B4, Anatomy and Physiology (6).
Spanish B1-B2, Elementary Course; Modern Prose and
Drama (6;.
Zoology Bil-B12, General Zoology; Vertebrate Morphology
(6).
B18, Entomology (3).
C31-C32, Systematic Vertebrate Zoology (6).
C34, Cytology and Comparative Embryology (3).
List of Courses
(In addition to above courses)
Open to Seniors and J^uiiors
Art Bil-B12, History of Art (6).
C5-C6, Anatomy; Drawing from Life (6).
C9 and CIO, Art Appreciation (2).
D7-D8, Figure from Life in Charcoal ; Head from
Life in Oil (6).
Astronomy Bl and B2, General Astronomy (6).
C3-D4, Descriptive; Theoretical and Practical (6).
D6, Astrophysics (3).
Biblical Literature C5-C6, Old Testament Introduction; New
Testament Introduction (2).
C7 and C8, The Teachings of Jesus (2),
C23-C24, Hebrew History and Jewish and Early
Christian History and Literature (6).
D25-D26, History of Religions; History of Christ-
ianity (6).
C3i-C32, Hebrew Grammar; Hebrew Readings (6).
Botany C23, Physiology (3).
C24, Sub-tropical Horticulture (1).
C25-D26, Mycology; Pathology (6).
C27-C28, Phaenogamic Botany (6).
C29-C30, Plant Propagation (4).
ANNUAL REGISTER 61
Chemistry C7 and C8, Elementary Quantitative Analysis (6).
C9 and CiO, Organic Chemistry (6).
CIS and C16, Agricultural Chemistry (6).
Dil and Di2, Mineral Chemistry (6).
D13-Di4, Inorganic and Organic Preparations (6).
D17, Advanced Quantitative Analysis (3").
Di8, Advanced Quantitative Analysis (3).
Di9 and D20, Special Advanced Chemistry (2).
D2i and D22, Physical Chemistry (6).
Constitutional History D9 and DIO, Comparative Constitu-
tional History (6).
Dli and D12, American Constitutional History (6).
Economics and Sociology B3, Principles of Economics (3).
C5-D6, Money and Banking; Public Finance (6).
D7-C8, Corporation Economics; Problems of Labor
(6).
DIO, Transportation (3).
D19 and D20, Applied Sociology (2).
C25-D26, Poor Relief; Criminology (6).
D27-C28, Theories of Social Reform; City Prob-
lems (6).
D30, Immigration (3).
Engineering D13 and D14, Applied Mechanics (6).
English D5-D6, Shakespeare and Early Contemporaries;
Shakespeare and Later Contemporaries (6).
C7-C8, Essayists from Bacon to Arnold; English
Novel (6).
C9-Ci0, British Poets; British Poets of the Vic-
torian Period (6).
D12, History of the English Drama to 1462 (3).
C2.5-C26, Journalism; Essay (6).
D27-C28, Literary Criticism; the Short Story (6).
C33-C34, Advanced Argumentation; Practical Pub-
lic Speaking (6).
C4i-D42, Anglo-Saxon; Beowulf (6).
C43-D44, English Prose and Poetry to Milton;
Chaucer (6).
French D5-D6, Classic Drama; Prose of the Eighteenth
Century (6).
D7-D8, Literature of the Eighteenth Century; Ro-
mantic School (6).
D7' and D8', Conversation and Advanced Compo-
sition (4).
Geology Bl and B2, Geology (6).
62 POMONA COLLEGE
German C9 and CIO, Novel of the Nineteenth Century (6).
C9' and CIO', Composition and Conversation (2),
D5-D6, Lessing, Goethe (6).
D7-D8, History of German Literature to Lessing;
from Lessing to Goethe (6).
D11-D12, Scientific German; Composition (6).
Greek C7-D8, Hellenistic Greek; Homer (6).
D9-Di0, Plato; Thucydides (6).
Dll and Di2, Composition and Sight Reading (2),
History C3-D4, Europe in the Eighteenth Century; Europe
in the Nineteenth Century (6).
D5 and D6, American Social and Political History
(6).
C15-Di6, Modern Asiatic History; History of Span-
ish America (6).
Italian B1-B2, Elementary (6).
C3-D4, Classics (6).
Latin D9-D10, Cicero; Catullus, Lucretius, Tibullus, Pro-
pertius, Ovid and Lucan (6).
D11-D12, Tacitus; Vergil (6).
D13 and D14, Composition (2).
Law Bl and B2, Elementary Law; Contracts (6).
Ci7 and D18, American Diplomacy and Interna-
tional Law (6).
Mathematics C17 and CIS, Advanced Analytic Geometry and
Calculus (8).
D21 and D22, Higher Analysis (6).
D23 and D24, Differential Equations (6).
D25 and D26, Analytic Mechanics (6).
D27 and D28, Projective Geometry (6).
Music C7 and C8, Counterpoint (6).
D9 and DIO, Free Composition (6).
Cil and C12, Form (6).
Philosophy C25-D26, Ancient and Mediaeval Philosophy;
Modern Philosophy (6).
C27-D28, Introduction to Philosophy; Metaphysics
(6).
D29-D30, Philosophy of Religions; Modern Philo-
sophical Problems (6).
Physical Education Co and C6, Sports (1).
C15 and C16, Sports (1).
C7 and C8, Sports (1).
C17 and C18, Sports (1).
C21 and C22, Folk and National Dances (1).
C23 and C24, Aesthetic Dances (1).
ANNUAL REGISTER 63
Physics C3-D4, Mechanics of Solids; Mechanics of Fluids
and Heats (6).
C5-D6, Sound and Light ; Magnetism and Elec-
tricity (6).
C9 and CiO, Physical Measurements (6).
Physiology D5-D6, Histology; Embryology (6).
Psychology C6, Advanced Psychology (3).
C7-D8, Educational Psychology; History of Edu-
cation (6).
Spanish C3-C4, Contemporary Spanish Novel (6).
C3' and C4', Commercial Correspondence (2).
D5-D6, Classic Drama; Prose of the Sixteenth and
Seventeenth Centuries (6).
Zoology C31-C32, Systematic Invertebrate Zoology; System-
atic Vertebrate Zoology (6).
D13-D14, Advanced Zoology; Bionomics (6).
Di5 or D16, Advanced Zoology (3).
D19 and D20, Special Entomology (6).
D33-C34, Comparative Neurology, Cytology and
Comparative Embryology (6).
Advanced Work
While the College directs its attention primarily to under-
graduate work it also desires to extend its opportunities to
students seeking the earlier stages of graduate work when-
ever it can do so without sacrificing the interests of under-
graduates. Only those are admitted who give promise of
contributing a definite and inspiring influence to the life of
the college. Such residence is therefore required as is deemed
necessary to insure mutually helpful relations.
Master's Degree
In a few departments, where the facilities of the College
warrant, limited numbers of students, whose under-graduate
records show excellence of marked character, are accepted
as graduate students in line for the Master's degree. Twenty
hours of graduate work, consisting of a major in one depart-
ment and a minor in the same, or a closely allied department,
together with a satisfactory thesis, are required. Details as
to prerequisites and courses offered mav be secured from
Professor -James A. Lyman, Chairman of the Committee on
Graduate Work.
Music Certificate
The College gives a Certificate of Proficiency in Music on
the completion of a satisfactory course in this department.
In order to secure this certificate a student must show
marked proficiency in a music major and general knowledge
in a music minor; work in Piano being required in all cases.
Proficiency in the major involves ability to perform credit-
ably and alone an entire program. This course includes,
besides the usual musical studies, certain courses in lang-
uage, history, literature and philosophy.
STUDENTS
The register of students is made up at the beginning of
the second semester.
Freshmen whose entrance units have been accepted and
who have carried the work of the first semester satisfac-
torily are placed in the first list; the others in the second.
In respect to other classes, those are placed in the first list
who are matriculated and who do not fall short more than
six hours and six credits of the necessary hours and credits
required at the middle of the year for which they are
registered; all others in the second list.
The standing of students enrolled for less than one
semester is provisional.
GRADUATE STUDENTS
Paul Adams Pomona
B.A., Pomona College
Marguerite Boardman Claremont
B.A., Wellesley College
Robert Bruce Findlay Pomona
B.A., Parsons College
Katharine Alma Hoskins Claremont
B.A., Pomona College
Paul Houghton Claremont
Ph.B., University of Iowa
Ernest Everett Jones Claremont
B.S., Pomona College
Katharine Isabel Jones Etiwanda
B.A., Pomona College
Mary Edna Lochridge Long Beach
B.A., Pomona College
Margaret Metcalf Claremont
B.A., Pomona College
Edith Elvira McConnell Claremont
B.A., Pomona College
M.S., University of California
Stuart Luther Peck Claremont
B.S., Pomona College
Alfred Oswald Woodford Claremont
B.A., Pomona College
66 POMONA COLLEGE
SENIOR CLASS
Harriet Ellen Allison Santa Ana
Wilma Andrews Santa Ana
George Babcock Pomona
Gladys Vivian Banks San Dimas
Edna Anne Beatty Santa Ana
Ella Alden Bennett Redlands
Francene Lewise Bishop Long Beach
Ernest Wilton Bougher San Diego
Roberta Burden Claremont
Cynthia Lynette Burnell Claremont
Ira Delbert Cate Long Beach
Mayme Ethel Church Pomona
Hugh Lathrop Clary Regina, Canada
Alice Margaret Clausen Santa Ana
Lois Mildred Clency Claremont
Hazel Augusta Converse Claremont
Stephen Adelbert Craig Upland
Bula Huntington Culver .....Long Beach
Paul Rodney Daggs Claremont
Helen Brown deCamp Claremont
Irene Thorburn deCamp Claremont
Ruth Eakin Claremont
Alma Emilie Edgar Claremont
Muriel Dana Emerson Prescott, Arizona
Francis Charles Flint Long Beach
Mary Hazel Hamilton Pasadena
Hallie Violet Hess Upland
Helen Winifred Hill Claremont
Ernest Gockley Hoff Maywood, Illinois
Florence Twitchell Holme Los Angeles
Ella Rice Hopkins Tulare
Grace Alice Hoskins Pasadena
William Ewart Hudson Alhambra
Helen Harmon Humphrey.^ Claremont
Frieda Johanna Iselin Banning
Ralph Patterson James Redlands
Hester Jewell San Dimas
Julia Martha Kingsbury Hemet
Rollin Jerome LaFollette Highland
Edwin Munderloh Landale Omaha, Nebraska
Edith Winifred Lee Pomona
Edward Payson Marsh Claremont
Frances Havergal Marsh Escondido
Helen Marguerite Mcllvried Pomona
William Gammon Metz Sheridan, Wyoming
ANNUAL REGISTER 67
Euth Eleanor Milliken Claremont
Margaret Lyops Moles Claremont
Charlotte Neely Claremont
Courtenay Stuyvesant Overin Los Angeles
Amy Pefley Claremont
Byron Stevens Phillips Pasadena
Nettie Elsey Pike : Long Beach
Archie Goodrich Postlethwait Corry, Pa.
Ethel Irene Prosser Pasadena
Walter Seaton Reeves Santa Ana
Hero Excelsior Rensch Pasadena
Adah Rogers Pomona
Barbara Stevens Sanford Claremont
Queenie Santikian Fowler
Ellis Savory Claremont
Marian Easter Skinner San Bernardino
Helen Whipple Smith Claremont
Herbert Spoor Redlands
Roy Abies Stewart San Bernardino
Chi Tsau Wang Soochow, China
Nannie Evelyn Weed Claremont
Carl Irving Wheat ., Los Angeles
Peter J. Wiebe Lordsburg
Margaret Dorothy Wilcox Lamanda Park
Gladys Wilson Pomona
Mary Lillian Woodford _ Claremont
William Perkins Channon Oberlin, Ohio
Loyd Otterman Cooper Burbank
Claude Craft Elsinore
John Baker Durkee San Dimas
Colvin Heath Pomona
Florence Wheat Hoover Claremont
Emma Ruth Matheson Glendora
Valentine Johnson Powelson Tacoma, Wash.
Voyle Dixon Rector Omaha, Nebraska
Birdenia Elizabeth Smith Claremont
JUNIOR CLASS
Constance Abbott Claremont
Julia Lillias Andrews Upland
Augusta Elizabeth Berg San Diego
Susie Jeanette Billington Upland
Paul Carrier Blaisdell Claremont
Helen Lucille Brayton Long Beach
Hazel Brewer Pomona
68 POMONA COLLEGE
Gei'trude Hazel Bristol Claremont
Jesse Ludowick Cobb Tulare
Wilbur Kirkpatrick Cobb Tulare
Franklin Cogswell Pomona
Caroline Whitehouse Coleman Pasadena
Helena Frances Curtiss Lordsburg
Frederick William Davies Los Angeles
Alfred Woodward Dodge Santa Barbara
Bernice Katherine Franklin Carpinteria
Emma Mary Freeman Pasadena
Mae Margaret Freeman Upland
Leon Lloyd Gardner Claremont
Clarence Sherman Gillett Claremont
Edythe Alice Graves Whittier
Marjorie Elizabeth Griffin Whittier
William Ferguson Hamilton Orosi
Edith Helen Hartley Upland
Allen Franklin Hawley San Diego
Clarence Hield Armada
Myra David Hoge Pasadena
Darley Frank Howe Chula Vista
Lesly Boyd King Covina
Helen Anna Lane .•. Pomona
Paul Adolph Lichti Cucamonga
Jean Frederic Loba, Jr Ontario
Fay Clark Marchant San Dimas
Anna Martin Claremont
Mary Ruth McLaughlin South Pasadena
Carl Clifton Mead Claremont
J D Mehl Upland
Glen Jewett Merritt South Pasadena
George Emmett Raitt Porterville
Lidablanche Robe Pueblo, Colo.
George P. Schooling '. Warrensburg, Mo.
Lydian Marie Pauline Schulz ...Upland
Mary Margaret Seeley Covina
Mary Alice Sharps Upland
Delia Sloan , San Bernardino
Catherine Smiley Orange
Alice Maybelle Stafford Corona
Andrew Acker Sugg Claremont
Chester Noyes Thompson Highland
Jean Thompson Highland
Floy Rita Vaughan Claremont
Frank Marion Watenpaugh Ontario
Arthur Fairchild White Claremont
ANNUAL REGISTER 69
Mary Cordelia White San Dimas
Clara Malvina Williams -Porterville
Harriet Holcomb Windrem ...Pomona
Marjorie Burton Woodford ..Claremont
Frances Yeomans Long Beach
Harold John Burt Upland
Margery Carpenter ...Hemet
Hazen Graves Chamberlin ...Ischua, N. Y.
Theodore Hamilton Coke Downey
Fred Austin Cox Holtville
Juliet Dixon Hanford
Paul Frantz Dresher Lordsburg
Ruth Frantz Lordsburg
Pauline Christine Jahraus Laguna Beach
Mildred Lavinia Jones Salt Lake City, Utah
John Lamont McFadden Santa Ana
Marguerite Parsons Claremont
Katherine Virginia Sinks San Diego
Vesta Marie Slaughter Pomona
Gretchen Virginia Smith ...Claremont
Joseph Robert Sperl Pomona
Katherine Stein ._.. Long Beach
David Sturges Claremont
Louise Walker Pomona
Cyril Harvey Warren Escondido
Glenn Baird Wilkins Claremont
*Jeannette Williams Pomona
Marguerite Arthelda Young Claremont
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Ethel Pauline Allen ..Claremont
Jessie Moultrie Allott Alliance, O.
Jean Armstrong Phoenix, Ariz.
Henry Reavis Barcus Pomona
James Bell Baxter Claremont
William Samuel Belden Alta Loma
Wayne LeRoy Bell Claremont
Marianne Elizabeth Bidelman Los Angeles
Ada Alberta Black Santa Ana
Jesse Christian Brandt Lordsburg
Clarence Wilbur Brock Pomona
Harold Delbert Brown El Monte
Winifred Estelle Bullock Rivera
Mary Dorcas Butman Whittier
*Xew students entering second semester.
70 POMONA COLLEGE
Ruby Catherine Campbell Orange
Mary Ruth Carothers Pomona
Margaret Cate Florence
Ruth Caroline Chamberlin Ischua, N. Y.
Elmer Shryack Clark Claremont
Idella Valerie Coleman Pomona
Harriet Mosher Coman Covina
Elmo Hanford Conley El Centro
Alice Beulah Cranston Santa Ana
Ray Frederick Cromer Upland
Albert Neil Dangerfield Riverside
John Murray Davison Riverside
Mabel Clair Day Claremont
Sophie Lois Doane San Diego
Marguerite Dodd Pomona
Florence Mildred Dodge Claremont
Paul McClean Dowling Fullerton
Marion Elizabeth Drown Nordhoff
Raymond Morgan Elliott Anaheim
Ruth Emily Epling Lordsburg
Margaret Edith Faires Claremont
Bruce Allyn Findlay Los Angeles
Ruth Fountain Banning
Rachel Sarah Fryer Claremont
Stella Gammon Pasadena
Vera Gammon Pasadena
Carroll Eugene Genung Pomona
Edmund Sheldon Gerry Ventura
Allison Bryce Given Covina
Helena May Goodale Anaheim
William Marshall Greathouse Santa Ana
Faith Amy Green Pasadena
George William Green Long Beach
Carrie Gladys Grimes Pasadena
Edward Tisdale Gushee Ontario
Helen Felicitas Haury Upland
Harold Coy Haymond Pasadena
Otis Townsend Hiatt Ceres
Nan Elizabeth Houghton Rivera
Edna Esther Ingels Fresno
John Baxter Jouvenat, Jr Sheridan, Wyo,
Marjorie Rood Kennedy Pomona
Edna Loftus Whittier
Orpha Lorbeer Pomona
John Lomax Love Long Beach
Mabel Mansur Santa Ana
ANNUAL REGISTER 71
Hazel Leone Maurer Los Angeles
Hazel Avis McClees Claremont
Clara Belle McConnell Claremont
Frank Dole McCulloch Upland
Lois Applegate McLaughlin Lamanda Park
Dorothy Neely Claremont
Faustina Nenno Fullerton
Clara Belle Nielsen Monrovia
Eleanor Okell Norwalk
Charles Eddy Orcutt ^National City
Margaret DeMotte Overholtzer Claremont
Wesley Lee Paul Glendale
Lewis Clifford Plush Pomona
Lowell Clark Pratt Pomona
James Lee Pride Pomona
Elsie Ann Randall Whittier
William Harold Rapson Claremont
Anna Belle Robinson Claremont
Warren Sumner Rogers Los Angeles
Paul Edv/ard Schwab Ontario
Dorothy Ashton Shade Rock Rapids, Iowa
Katherine Crowell Sharpless Perris
Carl Shepard = Compton
Earle Valentine Skinner San Bernardino
Mary Isabel Smiley Orange
Amelia Ora Smith Claremont
Georgia Victoria Smith Santa Ana
Mabel Ayretta Stanford Claremont
Anna Abigail Stewart Claremont
Helen Hope Sturges Claremont
Walter Eugene Coe Sturges Claremont
Elizabeth Hayden Taylor Ontario
Mabel Louise Tubbs . ...Tustin
Jerome Bonaparte Walden Claremont
Richard Carlisle Waltz Ontario
Marion Skinner Warren Covina
Paul Edward Webb Pomona
James David Weinland Banning
Florence lone Wilson Artesia
Florence Mary Wilson Los Angeles
Elsie Katharine Wingood Santa Ana
Lola May Wire Chino
John Dick Young San Bernardino
72 POMONA COLLEGE
Liberty Eustathius Alimisis Ontario
Jessie Gladys Bailard Carpinteria
Mary Faye Beaty Paso Robles
Bernhardt Louis Bergstrom El Monte
*Alyce Marguerite Bolton Long Beach
John Parsons Campbell San Dimas
Florence Marie Case Pomona
Ching Han Chen . . . Canton, China
Vesta Maud Cornell Long Beach
Euth Marie Craig Pomona
William Harold Cree..... Claremont
Nat Marshall Fox , San Diego
Gladys Helen Fritz Redondo Beach
Marjorie Harris , Pomona
Charles Rupert Hartshorn Holtville
Marie Evelyn Harvey Upland
Frederick Hastings Claremont
fEva Louise Haworth Los Angeles
Graham Herbert Humphrey Escondido
Earl Hubbard Johnson Ontario
^Florence Anna Johnson ...Ontario
Walter Harold Johnson Pomona
*Shinsaku Katayama Marugame, Japan
Robert Loring Keyes ..Claremont
George Gaylord Kirkpatrick Pomona
Howard Arthur Krause Anaheim
Sydney Anne McClees Claremont
Helen Camp McDonald Pasadena
Leah Myers Compton
Hazel Grace Pine Corona
Minor Kelley Reid ...Banning
Orrin Warner Robinson Dinuba
Emma Pauline Sears Porterville
Marjorie Isabelle Shaw Claremont
Walter Edgar Stafford Santa Ana
Harry E. Staples Chicago
Robert Lars Stensgaard ' ..Pomona
George Walton Stickney Upland
Monda Louise Taylor El Monte
Susan Gertrude Tracy Claremont
Ray Trussell, Jr Escondido
Genevieve Newman Vredenburgh Chino
Harold Ramsey Youngman Santa Ana
tDeceased.
*New students entering second semester.
ANNUAL REGISTER 73
FRESHMAN CLASS
Hollis Partridge Allen , Pasadena
Mabel Allen Claremont
June Andrews Rigby, Idaho
Cheerful Hyacinth Apple El Centre
Eodney Fremont Atsatt Los Angeles
Edith Sophia Avison Long Beach
Paul Wilton Barton Fairbault, Minn.
Robert Rowe Benson Grainfield, Kansas
Ruth Benson Orange
Edwin Frisbie Birdsall Corona
Margaret Winslow Bixby Long Beach
Frederick Sumner Brackett ...Claremont
Catherine Helen Bradshaw Orange
Henry Levi Bray Taft
Irene Lucille Brooks El Centro
Lenabelle Cannon Ventura
Donald Edward Clark Santa Monica
Louisa Lewis Clark Oberlin, Ohio
Heber Hovey Clewett Pomona
William Thomas Melvin Cook Chino
Helen Laura Cowles Campbell
Rebekah Taylor Crabtree San Diego
Clyde Edward Crawford Wildomar
Horace Willard Cutler Pasadena
Helen Inez Daley San Bernardino
Alice Dorothy Daniels Riverside
Esther Coyne Daniels Riverside
Mary Ailing Davies Los Angeles
Fern Dow Redlands
Aileen Lois Drobish Riverside
Ruth Marie Duncan Upland
Marafred Carolyn Durant Claremont
Alma Celia Evans Pomona
Harold Raymond Eyer Upland
Dorothy Fellows Pomona
Mary-Stuart Fox Pomona
William Laurence Gantz Pomona
Archibald Maclay Gardner Whittier
Judith Margaret Garrison St. Louis, Mo.
Gladys Gervais Anaheim
Edward Martin Gibbs Long Beach
Katherine Gilbert Long Beach
Mable Gladys Girton Orange
Allen Smith Grover San Jacinto
Walter Lowrie Grow Highland
74 POMONA COLLEGE
Louise Hendrie Grubb Santa Ana
Robert Morrison Hager Claremont
Irene Emily Hall Pomona
Cortis Eddy Hamilton Orosi
Estelle Hamilton Claremont
Agnes Ida Hammond Covina
Marjorie Dayton Hitchcock Pasadena
Donald Erwin Ingham Claremont
Hetty Joy Jameson Corona
Ida Marian Jenkins Ontario
Charlotte Mary Johnson South Pasadena
Ethel Jones Pomona
Lecile Jones Long Beach
Lucius Paine Jones Harwich, Mass.
Margaret May Jones Whittier
Herbert Raymond Kendall Santa Ana
Austin Royal King Claremont
Helen Anna King Pasadena
Edith Kingman Claremont
Agnes Leek Claremont
Irene Leek Claremont
Helen Linn Santa Ana
Herbert Charles McCuUoch Upland
Charlotte Elizabeth McGee Pasadena
Marjorie Leslie McKillop Silverdale, Wash.
Ruby Vera Mehl Upland
Geneva Evadne Miller Pasadena
Grace Miller Pomona
Mary Miller Ontario
Ruth Weber Mitchell Ontario
Dorothy Montgomery Marshall, Mo.
Jeanette Marguerite Nickey Long Beach
.James Nisbet Pomona
Estelle Geneva Nisson Santa Ana
Valernice Edwin Noonan Ontario
Velma Mary Osier Pomona
.Joy Lorene Peck Pomona
Frank Leon Pellissier Whittier
Margaret Pendergast Carpinteria
Anne Louise Perry Pomona
Myrtle Gladys Pine Corona
Helen Powell Claremont
Ruth Marie Randall Highland
Helen Bertha Reinhaus Santa Ana
Charles Sumner Reynolds Upland
Elmer Mark Robbins Bangor, Mich.
ANNUAL REGISTER 75
Margaret Nealley Koy Santa Ana
Eleanor Sargent Upland
Susan Jane Shedd Los Angeles
Phebe Sheldon Ventura
Katharine Sias Corona
Margaret Louise Siddall South Pasadena
Anna Katharine Skeele Los Angeles
Clifford Frank Smith Pomona
Alma Jean Stelson Claremont
Edmund Parker Stone Pomona
Ruth Utt Claremont
Philip Everest Van Arnam Riverside
Bruce McClain Wallace Santa Ana
Raymond Morrison Wansley San Diego
Evelyn Mae Weirick Pomona
Elwyn Haskell Welch Pomona
Edwin Pascal Whitney Claremont
Emma May Wickersheim Orange
Martha Hatch Winslow Pasadena
Madge Wire Pomona
Elizabeth Deshler Woodhouse Pasadena
Emanuel Paul Young Claremont
Francyl Reseda Zumbro Riverside
Hazel Corinne Zumbro Riverside
Raymond Adkinson El Toro
Paul Barber Anderson Santa Ana
DeGraff Austin San Diego
Esther Baker Pomona
Mary Broughton Bell Claremont
Samuel Benjamin Berry Redlands
Helen Dorothy Brush Covina
Genevieve Burton Pomona
Doris Margaret Carver Los Angeles
Anna Marie Cole Pasadena
Clarence Cooper Pomona
William Howard Craig Upland
Earle Clifford Dahlem Alta Loma
Darsie Lloyd Darsie Hollywood
Frank Audel Davis Santa Maria
* Virginia Dearborn Riverside
Ralph Emory Dickenson Santa Paula
Jessie Dow Redlands
Julian Bryan Downey, Jr Claremont
Eugene Bailey Eaton Riverside
*New students entering second semester.
76 POMONA COLLEGE
Edith Beatrice Eldred '. San Diego
Edith May Evans Pasadena
Henry Dwight Fansler Philadelphia, Pa.
*Elva Vivian Farrar Riverside
*Gretchen Mae Fitkin Claremont
William Lloyd Fletcher San Fernando
Harold Humphrey Fountain Banning
Winifred McPherson Goodrich Portland, Ore.
Charles Nathan Green Fair Haven, Mo.
Wade Fitzgerald Hamilton Redlands
Henry Bennett Hamner Corona
*Mabel Harbour Orange
Alberta Harrison San Bernardino
Gifford Hartley Upland
Frank Dale Healy Claremont
Annie Jeffery Hill Huntington Beach
Elizabeth Ivy Hill Dinuba
Clarence Gould Hinton Claremont
Marguerite Hiskey Alta Loma
*Marjorie Hopkins Pomona
*Richard Davis Hopkins ...Pomona
Cathrine Theresa Hornby Burbank
Ruth Home Hollywood
Lowell Howe Chula Vista
Ruth Humphrey Claremont
Eva Maye Hyde Calexico
*Albin August Iselin Casa Grande, Ariz.
Frances Mary Jacobs Pasadena
Joseph Clement Jenkins Pomona
Kathleen Jeanette Jenness Long Beach
Louiez Lester Johnson Los Angeles
Margaret Johnston Claremont
Hazel Jones Pasadena
*Silas Ely Kennedy Long Beach
Mary Chase Kenyon San Diego
Rosita Kerckhoff Covina
Lura Elizabeth Kerr : Santa Maria
Clay Killian El Monte
Paul Mathews Kinney Grants Pass, Ore.
Morris Kirkpatrick Pomona
Helen Corita Logie Redlands
*Elsie Henrietta Lutz Santa Ana
La Salle Almeron Maynard Claremont
Anna Marie McGrann Imperial
*Marguerite Viviann Moe Claremont
*New students entering second semester
ANNUAL REGISTER 77
Benjamin Gunder Nordstrom Kingsburg
Ruth Olmstead Pomona
Howard Greenwood Peacock Pomona
Carroll Morris Powers Minneapolis, Minn.
George Floyd Rice Encinitas
Clarence Starr Roberts Pomona
*William Reid Rodgers San Francisco
Leah Wyoming Saviers Santa Paula
Adeline Anna Schanel El Monte
Ralph Shallenberger Santa Ana
Elizabeth Margaret Sheppard Ontario
Willard Rossiter Smart Claremont
Beatrice Smith Upland
Thomas Church Haskal Thacher Nordhoff
John Niehaus Trefzger San Diego
*Ruth Angele Visel Santa Ana
Louise Walton Lakeside
Robert Carlton Witter Claremont
*Elsie Mae Woehr Claremont
Marguerite Young Sacramento
SPECIAL STUDENTS
Martha Bentley Ackerman Claremont
Nelle Mae Ainsworth Orange
Syvilla Bendixen Springfield, Minn.
Calvin Newton Burton Pomona
Dorothy May Elton South Pasadena
Jessie Alice Knox Ocean Park
Harold Ward Pfiffner Fairmont, Minn.
William Merritt Pinckney Claremont
Catherine Stephenson-Scott Claremont
Sophie Seymour Stearns ...Claremont
Emily S. M. Waite Ravenna, Ohio
*New students entering second semester.
78 POMONA COLLEGE
SPECIAL STUDENTS IN MUSIC AND ART, NOT REGISTERED FOR
CREDIT
Martha Breakey Covina
Florence Marie Fox La Mesa
Hazel Gapp Pomona
Persis Ethel Geier Claremont
Madeleine Jones Harwich, Mass.
Wilhelmina Kent Pomona
Percy Olds Pomona
Clara Perrin Pomona
Mrs. William L. Stanton Glendora
Harold W. Stilson Corona
SUMMARY
Graduate Students 12
Seniors 81
Juniors 81
Sophomores 146
Freshmen 200
Special Students 11
Special Music and Art Students 10
Total 541
DEGREES, HONORS AND PRIZES
Degrees Conferred in 1914
MASTER OF SCIENCE
IN ZOOLOGY
Gertrude Auld Bacon, Claremont
B. A., Pomona College
BACHELOR OF ARTS
Summa cum Laude
Kenneth Glendower Darling, Claremont
Mary Edna Lochridge, Claremont
Magna cum Laude
Harry Alonzo Brandt, Lordsburg
Ralph Dalton Cornell, Long Beach
Cum Laude
Bertha Harding Allen, Pasadena
Eunice Atkinson, Los Angeles
Holland Field Burr, Pomona
Paul Armstrong Davies, Los Angeles
Anna Lucile Elliott, Pomona
Edith Marguerite Hitchcock, Claremont
Winifred Rachel Hogan, Lancaster
Josephine Elizabeth Jacks, Batavia, N, Y.
Hugh Toland Jones, Pomona
Katharine Loney Llewellyn, Pomona
Margaret Painter, Glendora
Catherine Eraser Snell, El Monte
Rite
Paul Adams, Pomona
Henry William Berg, Reedley
Voyle Ellsworth Brennen, Los Angeles
Ruth Eunice Bullock, Redlands
Sarah Avis Crook, Covina
Helen Nina Davis, Pomona
Freeman Morgan Eakin, Claremont
Frederick Newton Edwards, Whittier
Elizabeth Augusta Foss, Los Angeles
Donald Frederic Fox, Pasadena
Eleanor Frater, Pomona
Marie Main Frost, Redlands
80 POMONA COLLEGE
Ray Earl Gardner, Claremont
Ralph Emerson Gibson, Escondido
Albert Howard Hankey, Santa Ana
Katherine Alma Hoskins, Claremont
William Jewett Howard, Whittier
Marion Johnston, Claremont
Harry Lees Kingman, Claremont
Clara Petronella Kommers, National City
George Coe Lorbeer, Claremont
Sarah Elizabeth Lorbeer, Pomona
Vera Helen Lorbeer, Claremont
Mildred Harrison Mansur, Santa Ana
Elsie May McConnell, Claremont
Edwin Thomas McFadden, Santa Ana
Edith Elizabeth McGee, Whittier
Addie Lula Miller, Pomona
Helyn Belle Miller, Lordsburg
Mildred Katherine Murphy, Pasadena
Esther Marie Nielsen, Monrovia
Anna Marie Norris, Los Angeles
Ruth Catharina Peterson, Pomona
James Tank Porter, La Mesa
Nelle Marie Remsberg, Santa Ana
Theodore Johnson Rice, Pomona
Harold Joy Ryan, San Diego
Estella Marguerite Seaver, Pomona
Mary Ellen Shrode, Pomona
Reatha Ava Smith, Claremont
John Whiteley Snyder, San Diego
Roy Elmer St. Clair, Lordsburg
Earl Henry Weed, Claremont
George Fernando Weinland, Banning
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE
Cum Laude
Stuart Luther Peck, Claremont
Rite
George Henderson Ash, San Diego
Edward Crane Bangs, Santa Ana
Harold Welding Daniels, Claremont
Lawrence Birney Gillette, Claremont
Warren Benaiah James, Redlands
Alberta Tomlinson, Claremont
Charles Hiram Ward, San Dimas
Henry Newton Wolcott, Tombstone, Ariz.
ANNUAL REGISTER 81
Honors Awarded in 1914
GENERAL HONORS
Senior Class
(The numerals I and II denote respectively first and sec-
ond semesters.)
Bertha Harding Allen I, II
Eunice Atkinson I, II
Harry Alonzo Brandt I, II
Holland Field Burr II
Ralph Dalton Cornell II
Paul Armstrong Davies I, II
Fred Newton Edwards I
Anna Lucile Elliott I, II
Elizabeth Augusta Foss I
Donald Frederic Fox I
Edith Marguerite Hitchcock II
Winifred Rachel Hogan I, II
Josephine Elizabeth Jacks II
Hugh Toland Jones I, II
Katharine Loney Llewellyn I
Mary Edna Lochridge I, II
Vera Helen Lorbeer II
Mildred Harrison Mansur II
Addie Lula Miller II
Anna Marie Norris I
Margaret Painter I, II
Ruth Catharina Peterson I, II
Catherine Eraser Snell I, II
Alberta Tomlinson I
Junior Class
Mary Frances Beck II
Hugh Lathrop Clary II
Bula Huntington Culver I, II
Helen Brown de Camp I
Irene Thorburn de Camp I
Ruth Eakin I
Hazel Hamilton I, II
Hallie Violet Hess I
Ernest Gockley Hoff I, II
Edwin Munderloh Landale I, II
Charlotte Neely I
Archie Goodrich Postlethwait I, II
82 POMONA COLLEGE
Ellen Queen II
Adah Rogers I
Queenie Santikian I
Ellis Savory I
Joela Sharp I, II
Carl Irving Wheat II
Sophomore Class
Constance Abbott I, II
Florence Chase I
Alfred Woodward Dodge I, II
Mae Margaret Freeman II
Alma Emilie Edgar I
Clarence Sherman Gillett I, II
Marjorie Elizabeth Griffin I
Allen Franklin Haw^ley II
Pauline Christine Jahraus I, II
Olive Kuntz II
Eleanor Allen Lee I, II
Lydia Mangold I, II
Ruth Jeanette Powell I, II
Gladys Wilson I
Marjorie Burton Woodford I, II
Frances Yeomans I
Freshman Class
Henry Reavis Barcus I, II
Lina May Bartholomew I
Mary Faye Beaty I
Ada Alberta Black I, II
Elmo Hanford Conley II
Harold Enos Crowe I, II
Margaret Edith Faires II
Helena May Goodale II
Helen Felicitas Haury I, II
Edna Esther Ingels I
Marjorie Rood Kennedy II
Margaret DeMotte Overholtzer I, II
Zadie Hanna Saecker II
Selwyn Jackson Sharp II
Marcia Clarice Spear I
Maria Louisa Van Rensselaer II
Richard Carlisle Waltz II
ANNUAL REGISTER
83
DEPARTMENTAL HONORS
Senior Class
Bertha Harding Allen
Harry Alonzo Brandt
Holland Field Burr
Ralph Dal ton Cornell
Kenneth Glendower Darling
Ray Earl Gardner
Winifred Rachel Hogan
Josephine Elizabeth Jacks
Hugh Toland Jones
Katharine Loney Llewellyn
Mary Edna Lochridge
Margaret Painter
Ruth Catharina Peterson
Catherine Eraser Snell
Roy Elmer St. Clair
George Fernando Weinland
Astronomy D7
Economics C5, D7, DiO
English D5
Philosophy C25
Sociology C23
Philosophy D28
Art A2, CIO
Botany D24
French B3
French B3', B4'
German Di2
Sociology C28
Zoology D20
English C28
Law Bl, B2
Sociology B21, C22
Physics Bl
French C7'
Sociology C23, D27
Astronomy D7
Mathematics D27
Philosophy C25, D26, D28
Psychology C7
Spanish Al, A2
Sociology D27
Art B12
Art D8
Zoology D16, C33
Psychology D8
Jiinior Class
Edna Anne Beatty
Mary Frances Beck
Paul Carrier Blaisdell
Lois Mildred Clency
Alma Emilie Edgar
Ernest Gockley Hoff
Edwin Munderloh Landale
Sociology B21
Spanish Al
German CIO, CIO'
Music Al, A2
Botany C24
Geology B2
Sociology C28
Economics C8
Sociology C28, B21
Philosophy B24
Philosophy D28, C25
84
POMONA COLLEGE
Margaret Lyons Moles
Ethel Irene Prosser
Ellen Queen
Walter Seaton Reeves
Ellis Savory
Joela Sharp
Carl Irving Wheat
Harold Richards Wilson
Zoology D19
History B22
Applied Music
Chemistry Dll
Sociology B2i, B22
Economics B2
Philosophy B24
Philosophy B24
Sophoviore Class
Harold John Burt
Margery Carpenter
Hazen Graves Chamberlin
Florence Chase
Lorna William DeVana
Alfred Woodward Dodge
Mae Margaret Freeman
Clarence Sherman Gillett
Edith Helen Hartley
Allen Franklin Hawley
Mary Ruth McLaughlin
Ruth Jeanette Powell
Elma Clara Schowalter
Delia Sloan
Catherine Smiley
Marjorie Burton Woodford
Chemistry C8
Music A2
Mathematics Ao
Chemistry B5
Apwlied Music
Sociology C22
Astronomy C3, D6
History Bi, B2
Mathematics C18
Physics C3, D4
French D8
Physiology B4
French B4
Chemistry C8, C15
Music A2
German B4
Mathematics Al
History B22
Chemistry B6
History A8
Spanish Al
Freshman Class
Henry Reavis Barcus
Mary Faye Beaty
Ada Alberta Black
Harold Enos Crowe
Margaret Edith Faires
Stella Gammon
Carroll Eugene Genung
Edmund Sheldon Gerry
Mathematics B7, B8
Freshman Bible
English A2
Art A2
Biology Al
Physics Bl, B2
English A21
Mathematics A3
Art A2
Engineering A2
Chemistry B5
ANNUAL REGISTER
85
Helena May Goodale
Helen Felicitas Haury
Edna Esther Ingels
Marjorie Rood Kennedy
Leo Joseph Klotz
John Clark Lewis
Hazel Avis McClees
Lois Applegate McLaughlin
Charles Eddy Orcutt
Lewis Clifford Plush
Alvin William Pruett
Orrin Warner Robinson
Zadie Hanna Saecker
Paul Edward Schwab
Selwyn Jackson Sharp
Katherine Crowell Sharpless
Amelia Ora Smith
Walter Stafford
Mabel Ayretta Stanford
Maria Louisa Van Rensselaer
Paul Edward Webb
Elsie Katharine Wingood
Lola Mav Wire
Applied Music
Freshman Bible
English A22
French A2
English A36
English A22
French Ai
Chemistry Al
Engineering A2
Mathematics B8
Art A2
English A21, A22
Chemistry Al, B5
Zoology B18
English A36
Freshman Bible
English A22
History A8
English A36
English A2
English A2
Engineering A2
English A2
English A22
English A22
Spanish C4
Spanish C4
Special Student
Eileen Tubbs
Art B4, CIO
Engineering A2
86 POMONA COLLEGE
Prizes Awarded in 1914
THE HOME ORATORICAL CONTEST
Carl Irving Wheat
James Brooks Blaisdell
WOMEN'S ORATORICAL CONTEST
Queenie Santikian
Frances Marsh
THE CONDIT CONTEST IN EXTEMPORANEOUS
ADDRESS
Edwin Munderloh Landale
THE DOLE DEBATE
Jean Frederic Loba, Jr.
Clarence Sherman Gillett
THE KINNEY DECLAMATION CONTEST
Barrett Carlisle Kiesling
Bruce Allyn Findlay
THE VAILE PRIZES (Not given)
THE MUDGE LATIN PRIZE (Not given)
THE LLEWELLYN BIXBY MATHEMATICS PRIZE
Alfred Woodward Dodge
THE MON CRIEFF PRIZE IN ASTRONOMY
Alfred Woodward Dodge
THE LORBEER PRIZES
Clarence Sherman Gillett
Leon Lloyd Gardner
^^Uu.i^fi'^'^'^' ^/c?.r
FEB 17 19"^
PomoiitPCollege
ANNUAL REGISTER
1916—1917
CLAREMONT
CALIFORNIA
POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
PUBLISHED BI-MONTHLY BY POMONA COLLEGE
Entered at the Postoffice, Claremont, Cat., as second-class matter
Vol. XIV
MARCH. 1917
No. 2 ■
Twenty-ninth Year
Pomona College
ANNUAL REGISTER
of the officers, teachers and
students of Pomona College
for the year 1916-1917
March, 1917
CLAREMONT, CALIFORNIA
Published by the College
CALENDAR
19 17
JANUARY FEBRUARY MARCH
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COLLEGE CALENDAR
1917
February 12 Monday
February 13 Tuesday
February 12 Tuesday
February 22 Thursday
February 22 Friday
Date to be chosen
April 2 Tuesday
April 12 Thursday
Date to he chosen
May 20 Wednesday
June 2 Saturday
June 11 Monday
to
June 21 Thursday
June 22 Saturday
to
June 26 Tuesday
Registration Days for Second Se-
mester. Examinations for entrance
First Chapel
Washington's Birthday
Matriculation Day
Senior Mountain Day
Spring Recess begins, 10 :30 a. m.
Spring Recess ends, 10 :30 a. m.
Mountain Day
Memorial Day
Last day for choice of studies for
the following semester
U
Final examinations
Commencement Exercises
September 26 Wednesday Academic year begins, 10:30 a. m.
ANNUAL REGISTER
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
George W. Marston, President, San Diego
Rt. Rev. Joseph H. Johnson, d.d., Jlcc-Presidcnt, Los Angeles
Rev. Charles B. Sumner, ll.d.. Secretary, Claremont
Charles E. Walker, Treasurer, Los Angeles
Rev. Edward F. Goff, Auditor, Claremont
Term of Office Expires, June, 1917
Rev. Raymond C. Brooks, d.d., Berkeley
Edwin F. Hahn, Pasadena
Stephen H. Herrick, Riverside
Seeley W. Mudd, Los Angeles
Rev. William O. Wark, Pomona
Term of Office Expires, June, 1918
Llewellyn Bixby, Long Beach
Rev. William Horace Day, d.d., Bridgeport, Conn.
Arthur M. Dole, Pomona
Rev. Henry Kingman, d.d., Claremont
William S. IMason, Evanston, 111.
Term of Office Expires, June, 1919
James A. Blaisdell, d.d., Claremont
Charles E. Harwood, Upland
Rev. Charles B. Sumner, ll.d., Claremont
W. H. R. Weldon, South Pasadena
Fred AI. Wilcox, Lamanda Park
Term of Office Expires, June, 1920
Nathan W. Blanchard, Santa Paula
Eli P. Clark, Los Angeles
Winfred E. Garrison, ph.d., Claremont
William F. Holt, Los Angeles
George W. Marston, San Diego
Term of Office Expires, June, 1921
Rev. Frank M. Dowling, San Dimas
Rt. Rev. Joseph H. Johnson, d.d., Los Angeles
Frederick W. Lyman, Pasadena
Butler A. Woodford, Claremont
Francis C. Yeomans, Long Beach
Ernest E. Jones, Business Manager, Claremont
POMONA COLLEGE
Committees of the Board
Executive Committee
James A. Blaisdell, Chairman
Charles B. Sumner, Secretary
Arthur M. Dole
Edwin F. Hahn
Charles E. Harwood
Charles E. Walker
Butler A. Woodford
Committee on Investments
Charles E. Walker
Eli p. Clark
George W. Marston
Fred M. Wilcox
Ernest E. Jones, Business Manager
Committee on Ways and Means
George W. Marston
Joseph H. Johnson
James A. Blaisdell
William F. Holt
Eli p. Clark
Stephen H. Herrick
Henry Kingman
William S. Mason
Seeley W. Mudd
Committee on Education
James A. Blaisdell
Llewellyn Bixby
William H. Day
Frank M. Dowling
Edwin F. Hahn
Committee on Buildings and Grounds^
Charles B. Sumner
George W. Marston
Committee on Nominations
James A. Blaisdell
Llewellyn Bixby
Charles B. Sumner
*In conjunction with a committee of the Faculty
ANNUAL REGISTER
FACULTY
James Arnold Blaisdell 345 College Ave.
President, 1910'
B.A., Beloit College; M.A., Beloit College; D.D., Beloit Col-
lege. Graduate, Hartford Theological Seminary.
Cyrus Grandison Baldwin Palo Alto
President Emeritus, 1890
B.A., Oberlin College; M.A., Oberlin College. Student,
Andover Theological Seminary. D.D., Oberlin College.
Edwin Clarence Norton 137 w. Seventh St.
Dean of the Faculty and Professor of the Greek Language and
Literature on the Edzvin Clarence Norton Foundation, 1888
B.A., Amherst College; M.A., Amherst College and Yale
University; Ph.D., Carleton College; D.D., Pacific Theological
Seminary. Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins, Columbia and
Oxford Universities.
Frank Parkhurst Brackett^ 270 E. Third St.
Professor of Mathematics on the Frank Parkhurst Brackett
FoiDidation and Director of the Observatory, 1888
B.A., Dartmouth College; M.A., Dartmouth College. Hon-
orary Fellow, Clark University.
Phebe Estelle Spalding 261 w. Fifth St.
Professor of English Literature on the Phebe Estelle
Spalding Foundation, 1889
B.L., Carleton College; M.L., Carleton College; Ph.D., Bos-
ton University.
Daniel Herbert Colcord 157 E. Seventh St.
Professor of the Latin Language and Literature, 1890
B.A., Amherst College; M.A., Amherst College; B.D., And-
over Theological Seminary. Graduate Student, Harvard Uni-
versity.
Arthur Dart Bissell 319 Harvard Ave.
Professor of German, 1892
B.A., Amherst College; M.A., Amherst College; B.D., Yale
University. Graduate Student, Yale University and University
of Leipzig.
^The date in eacli case denotes the beginning of original term
of sei'vice.
^Absent on leave first semester, 1916-1917.
8 POMONA COLLEGE
George Gale Hitchcock 721 College Ave.
Professor of Physics, 1892
B.A., University of Nebraska. Graduate Student, Johns
Hopkins and Cornell Universities.
Albert John Cook^
Emeritus Professor of Biology, 1894
B.S., Michigan Agricultural College; M.S., Michigan Agri-
cultural College; D.Sc, Michigan Agricultural College. Grad-
uate Student, Harvard and Cornell Universities.
George Stedman Sumner 105 College Ave.
Professor of Economics and Sociology on the Stedman-
Sumner Foundation, 1897
B.A., Pomona College; B.A., Yale University; Ph.D., Yale
University.
Charles Cummings Stearns 146 E. Tenth St.
Professor of Biblical History and Literature on the Nancy M.
Lyon Foundation, 1906
B.A., Yale University; M.A., Yale University; B.D., TTnion
Theological Seminary. Graduate Student, University of Berlin.
Grace Ella Berry" Sumner Hall
Dean of Women and Assistant Professor of Mathematics 1909
B.S., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Mount Holyoke College.
James Alexander Lyman 833 Indian Hill Blvd.
Professor of Chemistry, 1909
B.A., Beloit College; M.A., Beloit College; Ph.D., Johns
Hopkins University. Graduate Student, University of Chicago.
Milton Erastus Churchill 507 Yale Ave.
Secretary of the Facultv and Associate Professor of German
1902
B.A., Knox College; M.A., Knox College; Litt.D., Knox
College; B.D., Yale University. Graduate Student, University
of Leipzig.
Mendal Garbutt Frampton 927 Harvard Ave.
Professor of the English Language, 1904
B.A., Illinois College; M.A., Illinois College; M.A., Harvard
University. Graduate Student, Harvard and Chicago Univer-
^Died, September 29, 1916.
^Absent on leave, second semester, 1916-1917.
ANNUAL REGISTER 9
Charles Gracchus Neely 1122 College Ave.
Professor of Constitutional History and Law, 1911
B.L., University of Illinois.
\\'iLLiAM Atwood Hilton 1264 Dartmouth Ave.
Professor of Zoology on the IVillard George Halstead
Foundation, 1905
B.S., Cornell University; Ph.D., Cornell University.
Fred Albert Bacon 736 College Ave.
Professor of Applied Music and Instructor in Singing, 1902
Student in Ohio Wesleyan University, Oberlin Conservatory
of Music, Chicago Conservatory of Music and Chicago Musical
College.
Willis Allen Parker .54ri Indian Hill Blvd.
Professor of Philosophy, 1912
B.A., Kansas State Normal School; M.A., Harvard Uni-
versity; Ph.D., Harvard University.
Bernard Capen Ewer 339 Yale Ave.
Professor of Psychology, 1916
B.A., Brown University; M.A., Brown University; Ph.D.,
Harvard University.
William Polk Russell 506 E. Sixth St.
Associate Professor of Mathematics on the Joseph W. Fiske
Foundation, 1904
B.A., Cumberland University; M.A., Cumberland Univer-
sity. Graduate Student, Columbia and Yale Universities.
Maro Beath Jones 306 College Ave.
Associate Professor of Romance Languages, 1911
B.A., Boston University. Graduate Student, Universities
of Geneva and Barcelona. Student, Estudis Universitaris
Catalans.
Arthur Volney Stoughton 146 W. Seventh St.
Associate Professor of Physiology and Hygiene, and College
Physician, 1911
B.A., Pomona College; M.D., Ohio Medical University.
Graduate Student, Medical Department of Johns Hopkins Uni-
versity and Medical School of Harvard University. Student,
Laboratories of Friedrichshain Krankenliaus and private labor-
atory of Professor Pick, Berlin. Resident physician, Protestant
Hospital, Columbus, O.
\
10 POMONA COLLEGE
Ella White Brown 301 Smiley Hall
Resident in Smiley Hall and Assistant Professor of English, 1915
B.S., Central Normal College; M.A., Campbell College;
LL.B., Kansas University. Graduate Student, Columbia Uni-
versity.
Hannah Tempest Jenkins Claremont inn
Assistant Professor of Art and Design, 1905
Graduate Teachers College, Columbia University. Student
Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts. Pupil of Jean Paul Laur-
ens, Constant and St. Pierre in figure and portrait, of Henry
Thompson in landscape, and of Wm. M. Chase, Robert Vonnoh
and Cecilia Beaux in portrait. Paris Salonist, 1889.
Robert Tresilian Belcher 169 w. Sixth St.
Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Engineering, 1907
B.A., Queen's University. Graduate Student, Queen's Col-
lege and University of California.
Walter Alfred Allen^
Assistant Professor of Musical Theory and Appreciation, and
Instructor in Organ, 1912
B.A., Beloit College. Graduate Student, Tale University.
Laura Charlton Squire 248 W. Seventh St
Assistant Professor of Physical Education for Women, 1910
B.A., Pomona College. Graduate Student, University of
California and Wellesley College.
Robert Martin Staples First St. and Yale Ave.
Assistant Professor of Violin, 1907
Pupil of Joachim and Dancla.
Edward Payson Bartlett Claremont Inn
Assistant Professor of Chemistry and Acting Dean of the
College, 1909
B.A., Dartmouth College; M.A., Harvard University; Ph.D.,
Harvard University.
William Sheffield Ament*
Assistant Professor of English, 1912
B.A., Oberlin College; M.A., Harvard University.
•Absent on leave, 1916-1917.
ANNUAL REGISTER 11
Victor Edward Marriott lie Twelfth St.
Librarian, 1912
B.A., Beloit College; M.A., University of California. Grad-
uate Student, Yale University.
Irving Otis Pecker Claremont inn
Assistant Professor of Roniance Languages, 1912
B.A., Boston University. Graduate Student, Boston Uni-
versity.
William Holland Matlock 246 Dartmouth Ave.
Assistant Professor of German, 1913
Ph.B., Drake University. Graduate Student, Goettingen,
Heidelberg and Munich, the Sorbonne and College of France.
David Livingstone Cra-wford 234 W. Sixth St.
Assistant Professor of Botany on tlie Henry Kirke White Bent
Foundation, 1914
B.A., Pomona College; M.A., Leland Stanford University.
Graduate Student, CorneU University.
Homer Elmer Robbins Harrison and Berkeley Avenues
Assistant Professor of Ancient Languages, 1915
B.A., University of Michigan; M.A., University of Michigan;
Ph.D., University of Michigan. Graduate student and holder
of University and Buhl Classical Fellowships, University of
Michigan.
Walter Earle Hartley 143 e. Tenth St.
Assistant Professor of Organ and Piano, 1915
B.A., and B. Mus., Yale University. Associate, American
Guild of Organists. Pupil of Widor in Organ and Composition,
and Stubbs.
Waldemar Christian Westergaard Smiley Hall
Assistant Professor of History, 1916
B.A., University of North Dakota; M.L., University of
California; Ph.D., University of California. Fellow in History,
Cornell University.
Carl Peter Schott 238 w. Tenth St.
Assistant Professor of Physical Education for Men, 1916
B.E., Nebraska State Normal School; B.P.E., Young Men's
Christian Association College, Springfield, Massachusetts.
Graduate Student, Purdue University.
Eugene White Nixon 219 "W. Sixth St.
Assistant Professor of Physical Training for Men, 1916
B.A., Monmouth College. Graduate Student, University of
Illinois.
12 POMONA COLLEGE
Reginald Pole los Angeles
Director of Dramatics, 1916
B.A., Cambridge University.
Mable Clair West 1016 Columbia Ave.
Instructor in Piano, 1905
B.S., Pomona College. Graduate Student, Peabody Con-
servatory of Music, Baltimore.
Harriet Pasmore 157 W. Seventh St.
Instructor in Piano and Singing, 1914
B.A., University of California. Graduate Student, University
of California.
Frederick Newton Edwards • 121 Smiley Hall
Instructor in Forensics and English, 1915
B.A., Pomona College; M.A., University of California.
Alfred Oswald Woodford 639 Tale Ave.
Instructor in Chemistry, 1915
B.A., Pomona College. Graduate Student, University of
California.
Francis Charles Flint ii9 College Ave.
Instructor in Chetnistry, 1915
B.S., Pomona College. Fellow in Chemistry, Pomona
College.
John Stark Evans 339 Yale Ave.
Instructor in Theory of Music and Piano, 1916
B.A., Grinnell College. Pupil of Ganz and Rubin Goldmark.
Juliet Dixon 345 College Ave.
Instructor in Physical Training for Women and Alumna
Resident, 1916
B.A.. Pomona College.
Arthur John Mertzke ciaremont inn
Instructor in Economics and Sociology, 1916
B.A., University of Wisconsin.
Kenneth Perkins 709 College Ave.
Instructor in English and Dramatics, 1916
B.L., University of California; M.A., University of Cali-
fornia.
ANNUAL REGISTER 13
Lecturers- 191 6-1 91 7
Rev. ALr.i;RT W'entworth Palmer, h.a., r,.D. Oakland
Thcuie: Social Applications of Christianity
Rev. William Orr Wark, r.a. Pomona
Theme: Biblical Literature
Francis Harding White, ph.d. Eighth st. and Colleg^e Ave.
Theme: Asiatic and South American History
George Burton Adams, ph.d., litt.d. New Haven, Conn.
(On the Joseph H. Johnson Foundation)
Professor of History, Yale University
Theme: Foundations of American Constitutional History
Rev. John Kingsley Birge Smyrna, Turkey
(On the Henry D. Porter Foundation)
Theme : Mohammedanism
Raymond Robins, ll.p,. Chicago
(On the Joseph H. Johnson Foundation)
John Douglas Adam, d.d. Hartford, Conn.
(On the Joseph H. Johnson Foundation)
Professor of Practical Theology, Hartford Theological Seminary
14 POMONA COLLEGE
Administrative Officers of the Faculty
James Arnold Blaisdell, d.d. President's Rooms, Library
President
Edwin Clarence Norton, ph.d. Room 3, Holmes Hall
Dean of the Faculty
Edward Payson Bartlett, ph.d. Room 8, Holmes Hall
Acting Dean of the College
Grace Ella Berry/ m.a. Sumner Hall
Dean of Women
Milton Erastus Churchill, litt.d. Secretary's Office, Library
Secretary of the Faculty
Frank Parkhurst Brackett/ m.a. The Observatory
Director of the Observatory
Mendal Garbutt Frampton, m.a.
Registrar's Office, Holmes Hall
Acting Registrar
Victor Edward Marriott, m.a. Library
Librarian
Homer Elmer Robbins, ph.d. Library
Assistant to the President
Marion Jeanette Ewing,^ b.a.
Assistant Librarian
Georgia Grace Thomas Holmes Hail
Assistant Registrar and Assistant Secretary of the Faculty
Advisers
Graduate Students — Professor Lyman
Senior Class — Professor Brackett," Professor Norton
(first semester.)
Junior Class — Assistant Professor Matlock
Sophomore Class — Professor Sumner
Freshman Class — Assistant Professor Robbins
DepartDient of Music — Professor Bacon
Department of Art and Design — Assistant Professor Jenkins
^Absent on leave, second semester, 1916-1917.
^Absent on leave, first semester, 1916-1917.
■■'Absent on leave, 1916-1917.
ANNUAL REGISTER 15
Other Officers
Ernest Everett Jones, b.s. ^3*5 E. Ninth St.
Business Manauer
Mary Louise Billings 541 Harvard Ave.
Accountant
Sarah Louise Jewell Sumner Hall
Matron of Sxinincr Hall
Florence Marie Fox Sumner Hall
Assistant in the Registrar's Office
Vera Helena Lorbeer, b.a. 365 E. Eighth St.
Acting Assistant Librarian
Bertha Lillian Bardwell Claremont Inn
Assistant to the Business Manager
Harold Burt, b.a. Smiley Hall
Graduate Manager of Student Activities and Assistant in the
Gymnasium
Forest Glenn Hutchison Blanchard Park
Superintendent of Grounds
Carl j\La.uritz Carlson 922 Columbia Ave.
Superintendent of Buildings
16 POMONA COLLEGE
Standing Committees for 1916-1917
With Place and Time of Meeting
Buildings and Grounds — (In conjunction with a committee of
the Board of Trustees) — Messrs. Stearns, Hitchcock, Belcher.
Room 51, Library. On call.
Classification — Messrs. Frampton, Brackett (Norton), Sumner,
Miss Berry, Messrs. Lyman, Matlock, Robbins. Room 7, 2:15
p. m., Friday.
College Life — Messrs. Norton, Brackett, Sumner, Miss Berry,
Miss Squire, Messrs. Churchill, Bartlett, Matlock, Robbins,
Jones, and Pecker. Room 8, 1 :15 p. m., Friday.
Courses of Study — Messrs. Sumner, Lyman, Hilton, Pecker,
Westergaard. Room 14, 10:30 a. m., Thursday.
Educational Efficiency — Messrs. Brackett, Frampton, Neely,
Ewer, Parker, Crawford. Room 7, 10:30 a. m., Thursday.
Faculty Meetings — Miss Berry, Messrs. Ewer, Marriott,
Sumner Hall, After chapel, Monday.
Federated Clubs — Messrs. Pecker, Hilton, Jones, Brackett,
Bissell, Edwards. Room 17. On call.
Graduate Work — Messrs. Lyman, Bissell, Belcher, Crawford.
Room 36, 10 :30 a. m., Tuesday. On call.
Librarv — Miss Spalding, Messrs. Marriott, Stoughton, Wester-
gaard, Mertzke. 231 W. 5th Street, 8:00 p. m., the first Wednes-
day of each month. On call.
Physical Education — Messrs. Russell, Stoughton, Schott,
Nixon, Bartlett, Miss Squire. Room 8, 10:30 a. m., Tuesday.
Puhlications — Messrs. Churchill, Stearns, Hilton, Woodford.
Secretary's Office. On call.
Public Events and Lectures — Messrs. Churchill, Hartley, Ed-
wards, Flint, with Business Manager Jones. Secretary's office.
On call.
Religious Interests — Messrs. Parker, Marriott, Matlock, Mrs.
Brown, Mr. Robbins. Room 58. On call.
Rooms — Messrs. Sumner, Churchill, Frampton. On call.
Rules — Messrs. Russell, Churchill, Frampton, Miss Berry.
Room 2. On call.
Student Aid and Labor — Messrs. Bartlett, Matlock, Marriott,
Mrs. Brown, Mr. Robbins. On call.
Summer School — Messrs. Bissell, Hilton, Jones. Room 4.
On call.
ANNUAL REGISTER 17
STUDENTS
The register of students is made up at the beginning of the
second semester.
Names are Usted in accordance with the standing at the
opening of the college year except that (1) those advanced
students who during the first semester have removed all de-
ficiencies as well as completed the hours and credits required
for the semester are given the rating thus earned, and (2)
those who having attended but two semesters have earned
at least 2>2 hours and 28 credits are ranked as Sophomores.
Sophomores and Freshmen are divided into two groups,
matriculate and non-matriculate students. Matriculate students
have met all entrance requirements and have carried their col-
lege work with success ; non-matriculate students have failed to
meet orfe or both of these requirements.
The standing of students enrolled for less than one semester
is provisional.
GRADUATE STUDENTS
Mary Beth Abbott Pomona
B.A., Pomona College
Irene Syfert Beatty Santa Ana
B.A., Pomona College
Harold John Burt ..- Upland
B.A., Pomona College
William Webb Clary Los Angeles
B.A., Pomona College
Lois Mildred Clency — Claremont
B.A., Pomona College
Juliet Dixon Hauford
B.A., Pomona College
Jessie Louise Durham Claremont
B.S., Drury College
Francis Charles Flint Long Beach
B.S., Pomona College
Mae Margaret Freeman Upland
B.A., Pomona College
Emma Belle Hield Claremont
B.A., Pomona College; M.A., University of California
Minnie Nevins Hudson Claremont
B.L., Pomona College
Orra Marian Mabon Claremont
B.A., Pomona College
IS POMONA COLLEGE
Harvey H. Nininger Lordsburg
B.A., McPherson College
Florence Grace Piatt Claremont
B.A., Pomona College
Nina Ellen Rice Upland
B.L., Pomona College
Gretchen Virginia Smith Claremont
B.A., Pomona College
Hiram Harwood Tracy Fullerton
B.A., Pomona College; B.S., Leland Stanford Junior University
SENIOR CLASS
Ethel Allen Claremont
Jessie Gladys Bailard Carpinteria
Katharine Fairchild Ball Santa Barbara
Henry Reavis Barcus Pomona
Mary Frances Beck National City
Wayne LeRoy Bell .•_ Claremont
Robert James Bernard Claremont
Marianne Elizabeth Bidelman Los Angeles
Ada Alberta Black Santa Ana
Jesse Christian Brandt Lordsburg
Henry Levi Bray Taft
Clarence Wilbur Brock Pomona
Winifred Estelle Bullock Rivera
Hazel-Gene Burnham San Diego
Mary Ruth Carothers Pomona
Margaret Cate Florence
Ruth Caroline Chamberlin Long Beach
Wilbur Kirkpatrick Cobb Tulare
Elmo Hansford Conley El Centro
William Harold Cree Claremont
Ray Frederick Cromer Upland
Mabel Clair Day Claremont
Carol Marguerite Dodd Pomona
Florence Mildred Dodge Claremont
Paul McLean Dowling San Dimas
Raymond Morgan Elliott Santa Ana
Ruth Emilv Epling Lordsburg
Margaret Edith Faires Claremont
Bruce Allyn Findlay Los Angeles
Harper Wine Frantz Elgin, 111.
Mary Ellen Fredendall Pomona
Rachel Sarah Fryer Pomona
Stella Gammon Claremont
ANNUAL REGISTER 19
Vera Ramona Gammon Claremont
Carroll Eugene Genung Pomona
Edmund Sheldon Gerry Ventura
Allison Bryce Given Covina
Helena May Goodale Anaheim
William Marshall Greathouse Santa Ana
William Ferguson Hamilton Orosi
]\Iarjorie Harris Pomona
Alary Louise Harris Santa Ana
Helen Felicitas Haury Upland
Harold Coy Haymond Pasadena
Otis Townsend Hiatt Ceres
Nan Elizabeth Houghton Rivera
Marjorie Rood Kennedy Pomona
Robert Loring Keyes Claremont
Orpha Florence Lorbeer Claremont
John Lomax Love Pomona
Mabel Mansur Santa Ana
Hazel Avis McClees Claremont
Sidney Anne McClees Claremont
Clara Belle McConnell Claremont
Helen Camp AIcDonald Long Beach
Sarah Leah Myers Compton
Dorothy Louise Neely Claremont
Faustina Nenno Fullerton
Eleanor Okell Norwalk
Charles Eddy Orcutt San Diego
Margaret DeMotte Overholtzer Claremont
Gertrude Colfax Palmer North Pomona
Wesley Lee Paul Huntington Beach
Bobbie Routh Pickett Pomona
Lewis ClifiFord Plush Pomona
Elsie Ann Randall Whittier
William Harold Rapson Claremont
Anna Belle Robinson Claremont
Orrin Warner Robinson -.- Dinuba
Warren Sumner Rogers Los Angeles
Smith Lafayette Russell Claremont
Paul Edward Schwab Ontario
Chalmer Brumbaugh Shaver Covina
iMarjorie Isabel Shaw Claremont
Carl Shepard Compton
Earle Valentine Skinner San Bernardino
Amelia Ora Smith Claremont
Georgia Victoria Smith Santa Ana
Walter Edgar Stafford Santa Ana
20 POMONA COLLEGE
•
Mabel Ayretta Stanford Claremont
Harry E Staples Claremont
Helen Hope Sturges Claremont
Walter Eugene Coe Sturges Claremont
Lillian Mathilda Svenson Los Angeles
Elizabeth Haj^den Taylor Ontario
Monda Louise Taylor El Monte
Genevieve Newman Vredenburgh Chino
Jerome Bonaparte Walden Claremont
Richard Carlisle Waltz Ontario
Marion Skinner Warren Covina
Paul Edward Webb Pomona
James David Weinland Banning
Florence lone Wilson Artesia
Florence Mary Wilson Los Angeles
Lola May Wire Chino
John Dick Young Claremont
JUNIOR CLASS
Raymond Adkinson Santa Ana
Hollis Partridge Allen Pasadena
Mabel Josephine Allen Claremont
Rodney Fremont Atsatt Los Angeles
Esther Baker Pomona
Mary Faye Beaty Paso Robles
William Samuel Belden Alta Loma
Alice Louise Bemis .— Chicago, 111.
Ruth Benson Orange
Bernhardt Louis Bergstrom El Monte
Frederick Sumner Brackett Claremont
Heber Hovey Clewett Pomona
William Thomas Melvin Cook Chino
Clarence Cooper Pomona
Vesta Maude Cornell Los Angeles
Helen Laura Cowles Claremont
Philip Sheridan Danner Pasadena
Darsie Lloyd Darsie Hollywood
Mary Ailing Davies Los Angeles
Marafred Carolyn Durant Claremont
Alma Celia Evans Pomona
Edith May Evans Pasadena
William Lloyd Fletcher San Fernando
William Lawrence Gantz Pomona
Judith Margaret Garrison Claremont
Edward Martin Gibbs Long Beach
Clara Belle Gilbert Pomona
ANNUAL REGISTER 21
Gladys Girton Orange
Allen Smith Grover San Jacinto
Robert Morrison Hager Claremont
Irene Emily Hall Pomona
Estelle Hamilton Claremont
Agnes Ida Hammond ,. Covina
Ethelyn Hampton Corona
Frank Dale Healy Claremont
Marjorie Dayton Hitchcock Van Nuys
Richard Davis Hopkins Pomona
Lowell John Howe Chula Vista
Rnth Winthrop Humphrey - Claremont
Eva Maye Hyde Claremont
Ida Marion Jenkins Ontario
Charlotte Mary Johnson North Pomona
Florence Johnson - Ontario
Ethel Jones - Pomona
Margaret May Jones Whittier
Shin'sakn Katayama Marugame, Japan
Edith Kingman Claremont
Ruth Anna Ledig Alta Loma
Eleanor Allen Lee - - Claremont
Agnes Leek Claremont
Irene Leek Claremont
Harriet Lucile Mather - Rivera
Carl Clifton Mead Claremont
Ruby Vera Mehl Upland
Geneva Evadne Miller Pasadena
Grace Gray Miller Pomona
Alarv Miller Ontario
Faith Lelia Nelson Oberlin, Ohio
Ruth Olmstead Pomona
Joy Lorene Peck Pomona
Margaret Pendergast Carpinteria
Carroll Morris Powers Minneapolis, Minn.
Vera Rebecca Ranney Fullerton
Charles Sumner Reynolds Upland
Margaret Nealley Roy Santa Ana
Eleanor Sargent Claremont
Phebe Sheldon Ventura
Margaret Louise Siddall South Pasadena
Clifford Frank Smith Pomona
Edna Anne Spalding Strevell, Idaho
Clarice Spear Monrovia
Mabel Wright Spooner Pomona
Anna Abigail Stewart Claremont
22 POMONA COLLEGE
Edmund Parker Stone Pomona
Valentina Ulmar Claremont
Gertrude Agnes Urton Pasadena
Ruth Agnes Utt Claremont
Rose Waldron Los Angeles
Bruce McClain Wallace Claremont
Louise Walton Claremont
Raymond Morrison Wansley San Diego
Evelyn Mae Weirick Pomona
Elwyn Haskell Welch Pomona
Edwin Pascal Whitney Claremont
Madge Wire Chino
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Vida Keziah Abrahams Downey
Russell Thurber Adams Monrovia
Ruth Sherman Andrews Los Angeles
Cheerful Hyacinth Apple El Centre
Wilson Arnett Ontario
Edythe Nettie Backus Monrovia
Russell Elliott Baird '. Pomona
Willard Daniel Ball, Jr Ontario
Marion Ballantyne El Cajon
John Leighton Bascom Orange
Flora Ruth Beaty Paso Robles
Mary Broughton Bell Claremont
Dorotha Harriet Benham Pomona
Allen Carrier Blaisdell Claremont
Alfred Block New York City, N. Y.
Mary Amanda Boardman Claremont
Claude Merle Bower Ontario
Clyde Earl Bower Ontario
Gladys Merle Bragg Pomona
Dorothy Jessie Brickels South Pasadena
Charles Chester Brisco Anaheim
Ensley John Campbell Orange
Reva Mildred Cartwright Santa Ana
Doris Margaret Carver .■. Los Angeles
Katherine Goldie Chace Wayne, Nebr.
Gladwyn Murray Childs Los Angeles
Homer Campbell Chaney Pomona
Roy Kenneth Cole Whittier
Ruth Mary Collings Claremont
Mildred Yost Cooper Pomona
Helen Genevieve Corwin Highland
Martha Ethelyn Cowan Claremont
ANNUAL REGISTER 23
Katherine Elizabeth Cowell Santa Monica
iMabel Elizabeth Coy Pasadena
Clyde Edward Crawford Wildomar
Philip Harden Davenport San Diego
Arline Davis Orange
Lena Davis _ Los Angeles
\'irginia Dearborn Riverside
W'illard Sigel Detweiler Phoenix, Ariz.
Charles Corbin Devalon Pomona
Charles Stephen Dewey Whittier
George Burritt Dunham, Jr Redlands
Eileen Belle Edmonson Downey
Henson Whitlock Paris Ontario
Gretchen Mae Fitkin Pomona
Robert Norman Frantz Whittier
Alice Dorothy Freeman Upland
Ira Nobles Frisbee Ontario
Merle Arthur Frost, Jr Lemon Grove
William W^aterman Frost Lemon Grove
Archibald Alaclay Gardner .— Whittier
Alargaret GaAlord Claremont
Charles Neil Gemmill Rialto
Vera. Lucile Glines Los Alamos
Winifred McPherson Goodrich Portland, Ore.
Vernita Louise Gordy Pasadena
Alarion Louise Gregory Whittier
Carl Wilbur Griffen Sheridan, Wyo.
Margaret Carter Grififin Santa Monica
Gertrude Crosby Hall Pomona
Grace Winifred Hamilton Claremont
Marie Louise Harris Pomona
Esther Viola Hess Upland
Ralph Huntington Higby Pomona
Edward Ray Himrod Pomona
Vern Curtis Hollingsworth Los Angeles
Winnefred Rav Horn Pasadena
Grace Elizabeth Hoskins Claremont
Verne Lee House Santa Ana
Vincent Leeds Humeston San Bernardino
Francis Ravmond Iredell Long Beach
Helen Kathleen Jacobs — - Julian
Kathleen Jeanette Jenness Long Beach
Elizabeth Jutta Jensen Ontario
Nydia Merced Jensen Riverside
Oiga Alargaret Johnson Fullerton
Hazel Verne Jones Ontario
24 POMONA COLLEGE
William Cb^de King Covina
Philip Leighton Covina
Agnes Louise Leonard Los Angeles
Evelyn Christine LeTourneau - Escalon
Helena Irene Mackenzie Pomona
■VN'illiam Ollie Mackey Banning
Nina Mann Lake Benton, Minn.
LaSalle Almeron Maynard Claremont
Eva McCarthy Santa Paula
Florence Boyle McConnell Claremont
Fay McCroskey Pomona
Herbert Charles McCulloch Upland
Charlotte Elizabeth McGee Pasadena
Gertrude Beatrice AlcKinley .-. Long Beach
Shirley Isabell Meacham Pasadena
Leonora Louise Miles Ramona
Ruth Ann Miller Ontario
Edith Mitchell Claremont
Joe Eldridge Mitchell — Pomona
Douglas Montgomery Sawtelle
Grace Viola Moody Chino
Winifred Moore Upland
Kenneth Morgan : Pomona
Marvin Morrison '.. Santa Ana
Marjorie Lamson Morse Whittier
Kenneth Royal Murdoch Chino
Elsie May Myers Claremont
Florence Newman Chino
Helen Marie Nielson Pasadena
Valernice Edwin Noonan Ontario
Dorothy Laurene Norman Edmonton, Alberta, Can.
Edison Orr Dillon, Mont.
Bess Frances Osier Los Angeles
Laura Foster Papazian Fresno
Edwin Robert Parker Long Beach
Maurice Amandus Perry Orange
Houston Peterson Los Angeles
Stanley Welch Plummer Monrovia
Margaret Clinton Pooley Riverside
Elsie Blanche Raitt Santa Ana
Bessie Amanda Reiner Long Beach
Lester Allison Reynard Beaumont
Grace Bernice Rhodes Chino
Catherine Johnson Rich Claremont
Margaret \\'inifred Robertson Santa Ana
Esther Frances Romick Claremont
ANNUAL REGISTER 25
Irene IMayrand St. Pierre Los Angeles
DeW'itt Clinton Scott Upland
Elizabeth Mills Scranton Riverside
Manila Seaver Pomona
Gratia Sharp Santa Ana
Lucile Belmont Simmons Los Angeles
Anness McCutchen Sloss La Mesa
Bradford Bixby Smith Claremont
Lucy Frances Smith Claremont
Clara Esma Snodgrass Claremont
Robert Pierce Stebbins Covina
Mary Gertrude vonStein Pomona
Hazel Marie Stone Ontario
Margaret Stover Claremont
Lillian Frances Street Claremont
Robert Lobingier Strehle Pomona
Wallace Tate .' Riverside
Helen Cecilia Thorbecke Jerome, Ariz.
Marian Towt Lindsay
William Webster Vannier Sierra Madre
Wilna Mepham Veazey Claremont
Ruth Bernice Walton Claremont
Walter Weiland Upland
Robert Douglas Whitson San Diego
Nelson David Widmer Upland
Arthur Maurice Williams Houston, Tex.
Ruth Gladys Williams Lordsburg
Esther Louise Williams Pasadena
John Walter Williams, Jr San Diego
Norma Elizabeth Wingood Santa Ana
Alartha Hatch Winslow Pasadena
Cecile Woods Beverly Hills
Lucy Castle Woolery Pasadena
Emanuel Paul Young Claremont
Olive Juanita Zumbro Riverside
Edwin Beattie Chambers Redlands
Edward William Doll Claremont
John Alger Flick San Diego
Harold Dewey Gardner Claremont
Charles Nathan Green Fair Haven, Mo.
Alfred Edwin Harwood Claremont
Robert Wilson Jones Los Angeles
Alan Kingman Claremont
26 POMONA COLLEGE
*John J. Kleinsasser Dinuba
Lola Kreighbaum Fullerton
Gail Gladj's Leamaster El Paso, Tex.
Phyllis Arlene Lord Riverside
Clyde Richardson McQuiston Rialto
Esther Mills Pasadena
Hugh Emmerd Niswander Pomona
Rex Ragan El Centre
Genevieve Rimpau Los Angeles
Thomas Parsons Sargent Mahwah, N. J.
Donald Wayne Schlatter Pomona
Rena Schott Salem, Ore.
Ralph Shallenberger Santa Ana
Helen Violet Sheets Pomona
Marv Louise Stevenson Lordsburg
Ram'el King Sybert San Diego
Susan Gertrude Tracy Claremont
Herbert Earl Webber Riverside
Stuart Gladstone Wheeler Claremont
William Hartley Widdess Pomona
Richard Scudamore Williams Rivera
Vivian Leonard Williams Houston, Tex.
Helen Dorothy Woods Beverly Hills
FRESHMAN CLASS
William Luther Apple El Centre
Laurence Franklin Arnold Palms
Lillian Virginia Asher El Monte
Clifford Backstrand Riverside
Catherine Thurmond Bailard Carpinteria
Ellen Bailard Carpinteria
Judith Eldridge Barcus Pomona
Mildred Elinor Barnes Chula Vista
Ruth Jeanette Bartlett Lordsburg
Grace Adelaide Bemis Rialto
Melicent Frances Benesh Pomona
Frank Hugh Bentley Claremont
Herman Stanley Bergstrom El Monte
Maude Esther Bird Santa Ana
Lester Lynwood Black Pottstown, Pa.
Margaret Otis Blake -- Hayden, Ariz.
Florence Lorene Breckenridge Santa Ana
Louis Burchall Byram Hanford
Frances Marie Carter ...- Duarte
* New students entering the second semester.
ANNUAL REGISTER 27
Susanna Case Claremont
Martha Agnes Chatham Nogales, Ariz.
Geoffrey Chu Chen .'. Kiangsu, China
Anna Marie ChumI Oxnard
Perry W Clark Claremont
Mabel Lee Cloyd Yuma, Ariz.
Alerrell Dare Clubb Pomona
Horace Taylor Crocker Glencoe, 111.
Xannette Dauner Alhambra
Dorothy Dola Decker Pomona
Donald Eugene Dement San Diego
Elma Dilg Pomona
Nellie Eikelman .• San Bernardino
Henry Bruce Elliott Whittier
William Warren Elliott Whittier
Susie Robertina Erwin El Monte
Frances Farmer Rialto
Alice May Fesler Covina
Belle Amanda Fesler Covina
Dorothy Elizabeth Findlay Pomona
Anna Elizabeth Finley Yuma, Ariz.
Mary Apolline Fritz Pomona
Fay Gantz Pomona
William Ersel Garrison Clarksdale, Ariz.
Ella Anna Gemmell Claremont
Violet Gervais Hawthorne
Robert Cameron Gillingham Compton
Virginia Judson Gregory Whittier
Dorothy Hall Claremont
Marguerite Hall Alhambra
Helen Margaret Hamilton Pasadena
Lulu Bernice Harker Phoenix, Ariz.
Robert Daniel Harwood Claremont
Flora Henderson Barstow
Henry Gustave Henderson San Dimas
W^ilson Hernando — Claremont
Gertrude Bouldin Hoar Los Angeles
Rolla Edwin Hook Perris
Flora Marie House Long Beach
^Mildred Howe Long Beach
Helen Margaret Iredell Long Beach
Clark Johnson San Diego
Evelyn Gail Johnson Los Angeles
Ivan Murray Johnston Upland
Gertrude Fern Jones Whittier
James McMillan Judy Claremont
28 POMONA COLLEGE
Robert Parsons Judy Claremont
Wilbur Elwood Kellum Bitrnetl
Hazel Kimbell .^ Riverside
Nellie Kimble Hanford
Laurence Ewing Knight Mendocino
Katherine Gray Laidlaw Ontario
Mary Ethel Lawrence Pomona
Berenice Livingston Oxnard
Evelyn May Lorbeer ". Claremont
Anita Evaline Lormer Pasadena
John Warren Loucks Pomona
Lewis Forest Loveland Pomona
Mary Ethel Lyman , Claremont
Richard George Manley Upland
Helen Mary Mather Rivera
Feme Elizabeth McCleery Los Angeles
Alice Moore Denver, Colo.
Wilbur Sturtevant Nye Covina
Paul Howard Olmstead Pomona
Helen June Paul Long Beach
Lois Eleanor Peck Claremont
James Kensey Peirsol Mendocino
Elizabeth Pell „ Claremont
Mabel Eleanor Perry San Gabriel
Margaret Alice Perry San Dimas
George Caldwell Pooley Riverside
Edris Powlison •. Riverside
Dale Quarton .. Anaheim
Cynthia Velma Reed Pasadena
Louise Hughes Richards Claremont
Rhea Francisca Rimpau Hollywood
Vesta Marie Ringle Pomona
Richard Gregory Ringo Bakersfield
Floy Louise Robinson Dinuba
Margaret Rooney Summerland
Grace Elizabeth St. Clair Lordsburg
Harry Prentice St. Clair Lordsburg
John Paul Sales Petaluma
Gerald Emmons Sanford Claremont
Katherine Pauline Sargent Claremont
Emilie von Schettka Chicago, 111.
Lawrence Edward Schick San Diego
Ada Allene Shepard Compton
Mary Marjorie Smith Pomona
William Max Smith Dinuba
Loyd Victor Steere El Monte
ANNUAL REGISTER 29
W'illard Edward Stokes Phoenix, Ariz.
Lloyd Christy Strong Pasadena
Estelle Louise Vandruff Huntington Beach
Albert Vollmer East San Diego
Marguerite Caroline VVaite Heniet
Ruth Walker Hollywood
Mary Elizabeth Watrous San Diego
Elizabeth Reed Watson Oakland
Edward Jacob Wenig Pomona
Bertha Elizabeth White Chino
May Wiley National City
Carol Harriet Willisford Glendale
Clarence Eugene Woodard Whittier
Alfreda Delight \\'right Chihuahua, Mex.
Marion Leland Wyman Claremont
Laura Bonnie Batkin Long Beach
Mildred Berentsen Pasadena
Elmer Leauvaux Bernard Orosi
DeWitt Sherman Bryant Steele City, Nebr.
Harold Lynn Cadwell Carpinteria
Milton Lorin Castleman Riverside
*Jerome Burt Chaffee Santa Barbara
Philip Colton Childs Redlands
Pearl Frances Clark Worland, Wj'o.
George Seidel Coulston Pasadena
Edward Bonaparte Covington, Jr Santa Ana
Raymond Bridgman Cowles Campbell
George Cree Claremont
Ethelwyn Beatrice Crockett Berkeley
Elwyn Breckenridge Crosswhite Claremont
Dee Ephriam DeLapp North Pomona
Frances Donnell Reedley
Edmond Wilcox Edwards Duarte
Russell Edwards Redlands
Richard Scott Emerson Calexico
Edith Eymann Reedley
Everett Foss Los Angeles
Leona Gertrude Geierman Altadena
Ellen Elizabeth Gilchrist Pasadena
Arthur Fav Gillette Lordsburg
*Bertha Alice Goetz Santa Ana
Anna Vera Good Fullerton
Marvin Greathouse Santa Ana
* New students entering the second semester.
30 POMONA COLLEGE
EUeane Louise Griffiths Covina
Alfred Monroe Griggs Exeter
Alice von Hagen Pasadena
Gifford Maurice Hartley , Upland
Mary Elvira Harwood Claremont
Allen Hastings Claremont
Hall Gillam Holder Santee
,Lova Gladys Holt Anaheim
Marcia Genevieve Hovey El Centre
Gladys Howard Phoenix, Ariz.
Inis Hutton Hubbard Lancaster
*Edna Amelia Hull Los Angeles
*Arthur Craig Huston, Jr Woodland
Herbert Charles Ion Drayton, N. Dak.
Flint Nye Johns Vancouver, Wash.
Young Oak Kang Claremont
Clair Evans Kirk Upland
Harvey Love Oceanside
Edvvyn Lucket Martin Oceanside
Rena Frances Martin Oceanside
John Sherman Maurer Ontario
Helen Briggs McCall Claremont
Charles Robert McClain - Santa Ana
Lida McClain Sterling, Colo.
Floyd Edwin Mellor San Jacinto
Norman Wight Metcalf Oberlin, Ohio
Lillus Katherine Middagh Walnut
Robert Stuart Miller Los Angeles
Lucian Edwin Newcomer Colton
Alan Osbourne Claremont
Marion Adella Patterson Burnett
Faye Louise Raabe Pomona
Horace Broox Randall Los Angeles
*Effie Maria Ransom Pomona
Dwight Lewthwaite Rawson San Jacinto
Charles Thomas Reagan Dinuba
Robert Meredith Riley Turlock
Elta Phlena Roe Pomona
Vincent Savory Claremont
Arthur Shaffer Chino
Arthur Shipley Santa Ana
Clarence Theodore Stover Claremont
Edison Lothair Teetor Hagerstown, Ind.
Earle Clarence Thomas LTpland
* New students entering second semester.
ANNUAL REGISTER 31
Reynolds Martin Tliurin Pasadena
Ogden Condit Towell Parsippany, N. J.
Blanche Dee Towne Los Angeles
Cheng Tsai Peking, China
Clarence \'animan Lordsburg
Charles Russell Weaver Twin Falls, Idaho
Zenore Adeline Wedel Reedley
Halsted Guilford White Claremont
Wilbur Woods Orange
Joseph Edison Reece-Worthington Denison, Tex.
SPECIAL STUDENTS
Hobart Romig Alter (Music) Ontario
Helen Louise Bangert (Music) Pomona
Alaude Gwenavier Brenner (Art) Pomona
Elizabeth Rice Campbell (Chemistry) Claremont
Lois Campbell (Music) Ontario
Pao Tai Chang (Modern Language) Shanghai, China
Amy IMae Clark (Music) Turlock
Marian Kirby Frampton (Music) Claremont
Ruby May Gantz (Music) Pomona
Edith Dyicsstra Hartley (Modern Language) Claremofit
Gladys Charlotte Hoskins (Music) Claremont
Ottilie ]\[. Johnson (English) Claremont
\\'ilhelmina Kent (Music) Pomona
Percy Woodworth Olds (Music) Pomona
Helen Overholser (Music) Claremont
Concha Romero (English) Chihuahua, Mexico
Catharine Stephenson-Scott (English) Claremont
Winifred May Shafer (Economics) Pomona
Jean Frances Walker (Art) Phoenix, Ariz.
Clara Willits (Mathematics) - Santa Ana
SUMMARY
Graduate Students .'. 17
Seniors 96
Juniors 85
Sophomores 190
Freshmen 210
Specials 20
Total 618
32 POMONA COLLEGE
DEGREES, HONORS AND PRIZES
Degrees Conferred in 1916
MASTER OF ARTS
IN ZOOLOGY
Margaret Lyons Moles, Claremont
B.A., Pomona College
BACHELOR OF ARTS
Stunma Cum Laiide
Alfred Woodward Dodge, Santa Barbara
Cum Laude
Constance B Abbott, Claremont
Paul Carrier Blaisdell, Claremont
Ruth Frantz, Elgin, 111.
Mae Margaret Freeman, Upland
^ Isaac Vaughn Funderburgh, Lordsburg
Leon Lloyd Gardner, Claremont
Clarence Sherman Gillett, Claremont
Marjorie Elizabeth Griffin, Whittier
Allen Franklin Hawley, San Diego
Delia Marian Sloan, San Bernardino
Marjorie Burton Woodford, Claremont
Delia Frances Yeomans, Long Beach
Rite
Julia Lillias Andrews, Upland
Clara Emma Balmat, Pomona
Susan Jeanette Billington, Upland
Hazel Marintha Brewer, Pomona
Gertrude Hazel Bristol, Claremont
Harold John Burt, LTpland
Margery Eva Carpenter, Santa Paula
Hazen Graves Chamberlin, Claremont
Jesse Ludowick Cobb, Tulare
Franklin Cogswell, Pomona
Theodore Hamilton Coke, Downey
Loyd Otterman Cooper, Los Angeles
Fred Austin Cox, Holtville
Helena Frances Curtiss, Lordsburg
Frederick William Davies, Los Angeles
ANNUAL REGISTER 33
Juliet Dixon, Hanford
Paul Frantz Dresher, Lordsburg
Bernice Katherine Franklin, Carpinteria
Emma Mary Freeman, Pasadena
Edythe Alice Graves, Whittier
Sadie Adele Griffin, Pomona
Edith Helen Hartley, Upland
Colvin Heath, Pomona
Clarence Hield, Armada
Myra Hoge, Pasadena
Ella Rice Hopkins, Tulare
Darley Frank Howe, Chula Vista
Ralph William Jesson, Claremont
Mildred Lavinia Jones, Salt Lake City, Utah
Leslie Boyd King, Covina
George Gaylord Kirkpatrick, Pomona
Helen Anna Lane, Pomona
Paul Adolph Lichti, Claremont
Fayette Clark Marchant, San Dimas
Anna Martin, Claremont
John Lamont McFadden, Santa Ana
J D Mehl, Upland
Glen Jewett Merritt, Duluth, Minn.
Marguerite Parsons, Claremont
George Emmett Raitt, Santa Ana
George P. Schooling, Warrensburg, Mo.
Elma Clara Schowalter, Upland
Lydian Marie Pauline Schulz, LTpland
Mary Margaret Seeley, Covina
Mary Alice Sharps, LTpland
Charlotte Shoemaker, Pasadena
Katherine Virginia Sinks, San Diego
Fanny Catherine Smiley, Orange
Birdenia Elizabeth Smith, Claremont
Gretchen Virginia Smith, Claremont
Joseph Robert Sperl, Pomona
Alice Maybelle Stafiford, Corona
Katherine Stein, Long Beach
Roy Ablps Stewart, San Bernardino
David Whittom Sturges, Claremont
Andrew Acker Sugg, Claremont
Chester Noyes Thompson, Highland
Jean Thompson, Highland
Floy Rita Vaughan, Claremont
Frank Marion Watenpaugh, Ontario
Arthur Fairchild White, Claremont
34 POMONA COLLEGE
Mary Cordelia White, San Dimas
Glenn Baird Wilkins, Claremont
Clara Malvina Williams, Porterville
Harriet Holcomb Windrem, Claremont
Marguerite Arthelda Young, Claremont
Honors Awarded in the Second Semester 1915-1916^
GENERAL HONORS
Senior Class
Constance B Abbott
Jesse Ludowick Cobb
Helena Frances Curtiss
Mae Margaret Freeman*
Leon Lloyd Gardner
Helen Anna Lane
Fannie Catherine Smiley
Joseph Robert Sperl**
Frank Marion Watenpaugh
Arthur Fairchild White
Marjorie Burton Woodford*
Delia Frances Yeomans*
Junior Class
Ada Alberta Black
Jesse Christian Brandt
Florence Mildred Dodge
Paul McLean Dowling*
Raj-mond Morgan Elliott
Ruth Emily Epling
Margaret Edith Faires
Vera Ramona Gammon
Otis Townsend Hiatt***
Margaret DeMott Overholtzer
Wesley Lee Paul
Orrin Warren Robinson
Paul Edward Schwab
Chalmer Brumbaugh Shaver
Mabel Ayretta Stanford
Florence Mary Wilson
t No honor list was published for the first semester 1915-1916.
* Registered for at least 12, but less than 15 hours.
** Registered for 9^/ hours.
*** Registered for ll^/a hours.
ANNUAL REGISTER 35
SopJwmorc Class
Alary Faye Beaty
Frederick Sumner Brackett
Robert Morrison Hager
Edith Kingman
Agnes Leek
Edmund Parker Stone
Bruce McClain Wallace
Freshman Class
Wilson Arnett
Allen Carrier Blaisdell
Gladys Merle Bragg
Philip Hayden Davenport
George Burritt Dunham, Jr.
Alice Dorothy Freeman
Margaret Gaylord
Grace Winifred Hamilton
Francis Raymond Iredell
Olga Margaret Johnson
Hazel Verne Jones
Kenneth Royal Murdoch
Elsie May Myers
Houston Peterson
Elizabeth Mills Scranton
Anness McCutchen Sloss
Robert Douglas Whitson
Departmental Honors
Senior Class
Constance B Abbott Psychology DIO
Economics D26
Economics D30
Jesse Ludowick Cobb Law C4
Helena Frances Curtiss Voice
Mae Margaret Freeman* Law B2
Italian D34
Spanish C24
Leon Lloyd Gardner Botany B22
Helen Anna Lane Psychology DIO
* Registered for at least 12, but less than 15 hours.
36
POMONA COLLEGE
George Emmett Raitt
Delia Marian Sloan
Fannie Catherine Smiley
Joseph Robert Sperl**
Frank Marion Watenpaugh
Arthur Fairchild White
Marjorie Burton Woodford*
Delia Frances Yeomans*
Law B2
Economics D26
Psychology D8
Zoology B12
Psychology DIO
Economics C6
Italian B32
Spanish D26
Art D8
Art BIO
Jiiiiior Class
Ada Alberta Black
Jesse Christian Brandt
Mabel Mildred Culter
Florence Mildred Dodge
Paul McLean Dowling*
Raymond Morgan Elliott
Ruth Emily Epling
Margaret Edith Faires
Vera Ramona Gammon
Otis Townsend Hiatt***
Margaret DeMotte Overholtzer
Wesley Lee Paul
Orrin W^arren Robinson
Warren Sumner Rogers
Paul Edward Schwab
Chalmer Brumbaugh Shaver
Mabel Ayretta Stanford
Richard Carlisle Waltz
Florence Mary Wilson
Lola May Wire
Art C6
Psychology D8
Psychology DIO
History B2
Music B4
Piano
Philosophy C26
Philosophy C32
Philosophy B24
Physiology B4
English DIO
English D44
English D12
Art B12
Botany D26
Chemistry B6
English DIO
English D44
Law B2
Psychology D8
Botany B22
English DIO
Philosophy B24
Astronomy C2
Economics B22
Economics DIO
History D26
History D26
* Registered for at least 12, but less than 15 hours.
** Registered for 9^2 hours.
*** Registered for 11 J/^ hours.
ANNUAl. REGISTER
37
Sophomore Class
Rodney Fremont Atsatt
Mary Faye Beaty
Ruth Benson
Robert James Bernard
Frederick Sumner Brackett
Mary Ailing Davies
Virginia Dearborn
Alma Celia Evans
Robert Morrison Hager
Edith Kingman
Agnes Leek
William Reid Rodgers
Phebe Sheldon
Edmund Parker Stone
Bruce McClain Wallace
Physiology B4
Psychology C4
Music A2
Psychology C4
Mathematics C18
Psychology C4
French C4
French A2
Physiology B4
English _A2
Economics B22
Mathematics B24
Physics B2
Psychology B2
Chemistry B4
Bible B4
History B2
Zoology C32
Biology A2
Bible A2
Freshman Class
Russell Adams
Wilson Arnett
Allen Carrier Blaisdell
Gladys Merle Bragg
Rutli Mary Collings
Philip Hayden Dayenport
Charles Stephen Dewey
George Burritt Dunham, Jr.
Alice Dorothy Freeman
Margaret Gaylord
Grace Winifred Hamilton
Melville Harrison Hatch
Francis Raymond Iredell
Olga Margaret Johnson
Hazel Verne Jones
Marjorie Lamson Morse
History A8
Mathematics B8a
Chemistry B5
English A22
History AS
Physiology A2
English A22
History AS
Chemistry B3
Chemistry B6
Music B6
French C4
Latin B6
English A2
Zoology B18
History A8
Physiology A2
English A22
German CIO
Physiology^ A2
French A2
German B4
POMONA COLLEGE
Kenneth Murdoch EngUsh A22
German B4
Elsie May Myers EngUsh A22
History B2
Physiology A2
Houston Peterson History A8
Elizabeth Mills Scranton German B4
Anness McCutchen Sloss Mathematics AlO
Walter Weiland Chemistry B6
Robert Douglas Whitson French C4
Physiology A2
I
ANNTTAL REGISTER 39
Prizes Awarded in 1916
THE HOME ORATORICAL CONTEST PRIZES
Paul Carrier Blaisdell, Claremont
Clarence Sherman Gillett, Claremont
THE WOMEN'S ORATORICAL CONTEST PRIZES
(Not given)
THE VAILE PRIZES
(Not given)
THE LORBEER PRIZES
Robert Morrison Hager, Claremont
Ruth Emily Epling, Lordsburg
THE MONCRIEFF PRIZE IN ASTRONOMY
Chalmer Brumbaugh Shaver, Covina
THE GEORGE A. GATES PRIZE
(Not given)
THE DOLE DEBATE PRIZES
June Andrews, Rigby, Idaho
Raymond Morrison Wansley, San Diego
THE LLEWELLYN BIXBY MATHEMATICS PRIZE
Frederick Sumner Brackett, Claremont
THE MUDGE LATIN PRIZE
(Not given)
THE KINNEY DECLAMATION PRIZES
Allen Carrier Blaisdell, Claremont
Ira Nobles Frisbee, Ontario
THE HAGER MISSIONARY PRIZES
James David Weinland, Banning
^
i/ftaii«S^''
WC^il i>^^o>^io
Pomona College
ANNUAL REGISTER
1917—1918
CLAREMONT
CALIFORNIA
POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
PUBLISHED BI-MONTHLY BY POMONA COLLEGE
Entered at the Postoffice, Claremont, Cal., as second-class matter
Vol. XV
MARCH, 1918
No. 2
Thirtieth Year
Pomona College
ANNUAL REGISTER
of the officers, teachers and
students of Pomona College
for the year 1917-1918
March, 1918
CLAREMONT, CALIFORNIA
Published by the College
e^Q-'l^ el
CALENDAR
JANUARY
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COLLEGE CALENDAR
1918
February 4 Monday First Chapel Service 10:30 a. m.
February 14 Tliursday Matriculation Day
February 22 Friday Washington's Birthday
March 30 Saturday Spring Recess begins, 10 :30 a. ni.
Al^r'd 8 Monday Spring -Recess ends, 10:30 a. m.
Date to be chosen Mountain Day
May 23 Saturday [,ast d:x\ for choice of studies for
the following semester
May 30 Thursday Memorial Day
June 5 Wednesday i
to r Final examinations
June 14 Friday )
June 17 Monday Commencement
Summer Vacation
September 23 Monday 'j Registration Days. Monday and
September 24 Tuesday \ Tuesday-, examinations for en-
September 25 IVednesday ) trance.
September 25 Wednesday First Chapel Service, 10:30 a. m.
4 POMONA COLLEGE
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
George W. Marston, President, San Diego
Rt. Rev. Joseph H. Johnson, d.d., Vice-President, Los Angeles
Rev. Charles B. Sumner, ll.d.. Secretary, Claremont
Charles E. Walker, Treasurer, Los Angeles
Term of Office Expires, June, 1918
Llewellyn Bixby, Long Beach
Rev. William Horace Day, d.d., Bridgeport, Conn.
Arthur M. Dole, Pomona ,
Rev. Henry Kingman, d.d., Claremont
William S. AIason, Evanston, 111.
Term of Office Expires, June, 1919
James A. Blaisdell, d.d., Claremont
Charles E. Harwood, Upland
Rev. Charles B. Sumner, ll.d., Claremont
W. H. R. Weldon, South Pasadena
Fred M. Wilcox, Lamanda Park
Term of Office Expires, June, 1920
Nathan W. Blanchard^ Santa Paula
Eli p. Clark, Los Angeles
WiNFRED E. Garrison, ph.d., Claremont
William F. Holt, Los Angeles
George W. Marston, San Diego
Term of Office Expires, June, 1921
Rev. Frank M. Dowling, San Dimas
Rt. Rev. Joseph H. Johnson, d.d., Los Angeles
Frederick W. Lyman, Pasadena
Butler A. Woodford, Claremont
Francis C. Yeomans, Long Beach
Term of Office Expires, June, 1922
Rev. Raymond C. Brooks, d.d., Berkeley
Edwin F. Hahn, Pasadena
Stephen H. Herrick, Riverside
Seeley W. Mudd, Los Angeles
Rev. William O. Wark, Pomona
Ernest E. Jones, Business Manager, Claremont
^ Deceased
ANNl'AI. REGISTER
Committees of the Board
Executive Committee
James A. Blaisdell, Chairman
Charles B. Sumner, Secretary
Arthur M. Dole
Edwin F. Hahn
Charles E. Harwood
Charles E. Walker
Butler A. Woodford
Committee on Investments
Charles E. Walker
Eli p. Clark
George W. Marston
Fred M. Wilcox
Ernest E. Jones, Business Manager
Committee on Ways and Mea)is
George W. Marston
Joseph H. Johnson
James A. Blaisdell
William F. Holt
Eli p. Clark
Stephen H. Herrick
Henry Kingman
W]LLL\M S. Mason
Seeley W. Mudd
Committee on Education
James A. Blaisdell
Llewellyn Bixby
Frank M. Dowling
Winfred E. Garrison
Edwin F. Hahn
Committee on Buildings and Groujids^
Charles B. Sumner
George W. Marston
Committee on Nominations
George W. Marston
Arthur M. Dole
William O. Wark
*In conjunction with a committee of the Faculty
6 POMONA COLLEGE
FACULTY
James Arnold Blaisdf.ll, m.a., d.d. 345 College \v£'.
President
Cyrus Grandison Baldwin, d.d. ralo Alto
President Emeritus
Edwin Clarence Norton, ph.d., d.d. 137 w. Seventh St.
Dean of the Faculty and Professor of the Greek Lanrjiiage and
Literature on the Edwin Clarence Norton Foundation
Frank Parkhurst Brackett, m.a. 270 E. Third St.
Professor of Mathematics on the Frank Parkhurst Brackett
Foundation and Director of the Observatory
Phebe Estelle Spalding, ph.d. 261 w. Fifth St.
Professor of English Literature on the Phebe Estelle
Spalding Foundation
Daniel Herbert Colcord, m.a. 157 E. Seventh St.
Professor of the Latin Language and Literature
Arthur Dart Bissell, m.a. 319 Harvard Ave.
Professor of German
George Gale Hitchcock, b.a. 721 Coiiese Ave.
Professor of Pliysics
George Stedman Sumner, ph.d. 105 College Ave.
Professor of Economics and Sociology on the Stedman-
Sunincr Foundation
Charles Cummings Stearns, m.a. 146 e. Tenth St.
Professor of Biblical History and Literature on the Nancy
AL Lyon Foundation
AXNFAL REGISTER* 7
Grace Ella Berry, m.a. Sumner Hall
Dean of Women and Assistant Professor of Mathematics
James Alexander Lyman, ph.p. 833 Indian Hill Blvd.
Professor of Chemistry
Milton Erastus Churchill, litt.d. 507 Tale Ave.
Secretary of the Faculty and Associate Professor of German
Mendal Garbutt Frampton, m.a. 927 Harvard Ave.
Professor of the English Language
Charles Gracchus Neely', b.l. 338 Harvard Ave.
Professor of Constitutional History and Law
William Atwood Hilton, ph.d. 1264 Dartmouth Ave.
Professor of Zoology on the Jl'illard George Halstead
Foundation
Willis Allen Parker^ph.d. 545 Indian Hill Blvd.
Professor of Philosophy
Bernard Capen Ewer, ph.d. 339 Yale Ave.
Professor of Psychology
Ralph Haine Lyman, b.a. 357 W. Tenth St.
Professor of Applied Music and Instructor in Singing.
Head of the Department of Music
Charles Berard Vogdes, major, u.s.a., retired ciaremont inn
Professor of Military Science and Tactics
William Polk Russell, m.a. 506 E. Sixth St.
Associate Professor of Mathematics on the Joseph IV. Fiske
Foundation
' Absent on leave, second seme.ster i;il7-1918
8 # POMONA COLLEGE
Maro Beath Jones\ b.a.
Associate Professor of Romance Languages
Arthur Volney Stoughton, m.d. 146 w. Seventh St.
Associate Professor of Physiology and Hygiene, and College
Physician
Hannah Tempest Jenkins Claremont inn
Assistant Professor of Art and Design
Robert Tresilian Belcher, b.a. 169 "W. Sixth St.
Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Engineering
Walter Alfred Allen, b.a., b.mus. 131 e. Tenth St.
Assistant Professor of Musical Theory and Appreciation,
and Instructor in Organ
Laura Charlton Squire^ b.a. 248 w. Seventh St.
Assistant Professor of Physical Education for Women
Robert Martin Staples Los Angeles
Assistant Professor of Violin
Edward Payson Bartlett, ph.d. Claremont Inn
Assista)tt Professor of Chemistry and Acting Dean of the
College
William Sheffield Ament, m.a. 135 E. Ninth St.
Assistant Professor of English
Victor Edward Marriott, m.a. 116 Twelfth St.
Librarian
Irving Otis Pecker, b.a. ■ Claremont inn
Assistant Professor of Romance Languages
William Holland Matlock, ph.b. 246 Dartmouth Ave.
Assistant Professor of German
1 Absent on leave 1917-1918.
'^ Absent on leave in war service, latter lialf of second semester,
1917-1918
ANNUAL REGISTER 9
Homer Elmer Robbins, ph.d. Harrison and Berkeley Aves.
Assistant Professor of Ancient Languages
Walter Earle Hartley, b.a. 143 E. Tenth St.
Assistant Professor of Organ and Piano
Waldemar Christian Westergaard, ph.d. Smiley Hall
Assistant Professor of History
Carl Peter Schott, b.e. 238 W. Tenth St.
Assistant Professor of Physical Education for Men
Eugene W. Nixon, b.s. 219 W. Sixth St.
Assistant Professor of Physical Training for Men
Philip Alexander Munz, ph.d. 140 E. Third St.
Assistant Professor of Botany
Reginald Pole, b.a. Los Angeles
Director of Dramatics
Mable Clair West, b.s. 1016 Columbia Ave.
Instructor in Piano
Harriet Pas more, b.a. 327 Harvard Ave.
Instructor in Singing
Alfred Oswald W^oodford\ b.a. 639 Tale Ave.
Instructor in Chemistry
Francis Charles Flint^, b.s. Smiley Hall
Instructor in Chemistry
J Absent on leave 1917-1918
2 Resigned.
10 POMONA COLLEGE
Arthur John Mertzke, b.a. Smiiey iiaii
Instructor in Economics and Sociology
Kenneth Perkins, m.a. 709 College Ave.
Instrtictor in Englisli and Dramatics
Leavitt Olds Wright, b.a. 306 College Ave.
Instructor in Romance Languages
Irene Syfert Beatty, b.a. 345 College Ave.
Instructor in English and Secretary to the Administration
Harold Franklin Humbert, b.a. 341 w. Sixth St
Instructor in Forensics and English
Marcia Clarice Spear 346 Yale Ave.
Instructor in Physical Education
Lecturers
Rev. William Orr Wark, b.a. 437 Kenoak Drive, Pomona
Theme: Biblical Literature
Rev. Howard Spilman Galt, d.d. H66 Columbia Ave
(On the Henry D. Porter Foundation)
Theme: Changes in the Orient viewed as Social Imitation
ANNUAI. REGISTER . 11
Administrative Officers of the Faculty
JAMES Arxold BlaisdeLL, D.D. I'resident's Rooms, Library
President
Edwin Clarence Norton, ph.d. Room 3, Holmes Hail
Dean of the Paenlty
Edward Payson BaRTLETT, ph.d. Room 9, Holmes Hall
Acting Dean of the College
Grace Ella Berry, m.a. Sumner Hall
Dean of Women
AIiLTON Erastus Churchill, litt.d. Room 53, Library
Secretary of the Faculty
Frank Parkhurst Brackett, m.a. The Observatory
Director of the Observatory
Mendal Garcutt Frampton, m.a. Rooms 7 and S, Holmes Hall
Acting Registrar
Victor Edward jMarriott, m.a. Library
Librariaji
Homer Elmer Robbins, ph.d. Room lO, Holmes Hall
Chairman of Committtee on Admission
Marion Jeanette Ewing, b.a. Library
Assistant Librarian
Georgia Grace THOMAS^
Assistant Registrar and Assistant Secretary of the Faculty
Irene Syfert Beatty, b.a. President's Rooms, Library
Secretary to the Administration
Robert James Bernard, b.a. President's Rooms, Library
Assistant to the President
Advisers
Graduate Students — Professor J. A. Lyman
Senior Class — Professor Brackett
Junior Class — Assistant Professor Matlock
Sophomore Class — Professors Sumner and Ewer
Freshman Class — Assistant Professor Robbins
Department of Music — Professor R. H. Lyman
Department of Art and Design — Assistant Professor Jenkins
^Absent on leave.
12 POMONA COLLEGE
Other Officers
Ernest Everett Jones, b.s. i?.f, e. Ninth St.
Business Manaver
Mary Louise Billings 541 Harvard Ave.
Accountant
Sarah Louise Jewell Sumner Hall
Matron of Sumner Hall
Florence AIarie Fox Sumner Hall
Assistant in the Registrar's Office
Gretchen Higbee 319 W. Sixth St.
Assistant to the Business Manager
Dorothy Louise Neely, b.a. 338 Harvard Ave.
Assistant in the Library
Frances Ten Eyck Pomona
Assistant in the Dean's Office
Bernhardt Louis Bergstrom Smiley Hall
Manager of Student Activities
Forest Glenn Hutchison
Superintendent of Grounds
Carl Mauritz Carlson 922 Columbia Ave.
Superintendent of Buildings
ANNUAL REGISTER 13
Standing Committees for 1917-1918
With Place and Time of Meeting
Buildings and Grounds — (In conjunction with a committee of
the Board of Trustees) — Messrs. Stearns, Hitchcock, Belcher.
Room 51, Librar}-. On call.
Classification — Messrs. Frampton, Brackett, Sumner, Miss
Berry, Messrs. Lyman, Matlock, Robbins. Room 8, 3:15 p. m.,
Friday.
Admission — Messrs. Robbins, Frampton, Miss Berrv. Room
10. On call.
College Life — Messrs. Norton, Brackett, Sumner, Miss Berry,
Miss Squire', Messrs. Churchill, Bartlett, Matlock, Robbins,
Ewer, Lyman, Hartley. Room 9, 1:15 p. m., Friday.
Personal Relations — Mr. Bartlett, Miss Berry, Mr. Mat-
lock, Miss Squire', Mr. Robbins. Room 9. On call.
Courses of Study — Messrs. Sumner, Frampton, Hilton, Peck-
er, Westergaard. Room 14, 9 :30 a. m., Tuesday.
Educational Efficiency — Messrs. Brackett, Neely', Lyman,
Parker', Ewer, Ament, Hitchcock, Munz. Room 51, 3:15 p. m.,
Monday.
Faculty Meetings — Miss Berry, Messrs. Ewer, Marriott. Sum-
ner Hall, 2 :30 p. m., Monday.
Federated Clubs — Messrs. Pecker, Hilton, Brackett, Bissell,
Perkins. Room 17. On call.
Graduate J-l^ork — Messrs. Lyman, Bissell, Belcher, Ament.
Room 30, Thursdays. On call.
Library — Miss Spalding, Messrs. Marriott, Stoughton, Wester-
gaard, Mertzke. Room 57. On call.
Physical Education — Messrs. Russell, Stoughton, Schott, Nix-
on, Bartlett, Miss Squire', Miss Spear. Room 9, 10:30 a. m.,
Thursday's. On call.
■< Absent on leave
14 POMONA COLLEGE
Publications — Messrs. Churchill, Stearns, Hilton, Ament.
Room 53. On call.
Public Events and Lectures — Messrs. Churchill, R. H. Lyman.
Allen, with Business Manager Jcties. Room S3. On call.
Religious Interests — Messrs. Parker\ Marriott, Matlock, Rob-
bins. Room 58. On call.
Rooms — Messrs. Sumner, Churchill, Bartlett. Room 9.- On
call.
Rules — Messrs. Bartlett, Churchill, Frampton, Aliss Berry.
Room 9. On call.
Student Aid and Labor — Messrs. Bartlett, Marriott, Robbins.
Room 9. On call.
Slimmer School — Messrs. Bissell, Hilton, Russell. Room 5.
On call.
^ Absent on leave
ANNUAL REGIS'J'EIl 15
STUDENTS
The register of students is made up at tlie beginning of the
second semester.
Names are listed in accordance with the standing at the
opening of the college year except that (1) those advanced
students who during the first semester have removed all de-
ficiencies as well as completed the hours and credits required
for the semester are given the rating thus earned, and (2)
those who having attended but two semesters have earned
at least 32 hours and 28 credits are ranked as Sophomores.
Sophomores and Freshmen are divided into two groups,
matriculate and non-matriculate students. Ma-triculate students
have met all entrance requirements and have carried their col-
lege work with success ; non-matriculate students have failed to
meet one or both of these requirements.
The standing of students enrolled for less than one semester
is provisional.
GRADUATE STUDENTS
Robert James Bernard Claremont
B.A., Pomona College
Philip Sheridan Banner Pasadena
B.A., Pomona College
Benjamin Hall Van Dyke La Verne
B.A., Colorado College
Jean Loomis Claremont
B.A., Pomona College
Fannie Mcintosh Lyman Claremont
B.A., Grinnell College
Florence Dodge Russell Claremont
B.A., Pomona College
Laura Charlton Squire .- Claremont
B.A., Pomona College
Charlotte Josephine Thomas Claremont
B.A., Pomona College
jMarion Howland Wright Claremont
B.A., Alt. Holyoke College
16 POMONA COLLEGE
SENIOR CLASS
Edmond Raymond Adkinson Santa Ana
Mabel Josephine Allen Claremont
J una Andrews Ontario
Rodnej^ Fremont Atsatt* Los Angeles
Esther Baker Pomona
Mary Faye Beaty* Paso Robles
Mary Broughton Bell Claremont
Ruth Benson „ Orange
Bernhardt Louis Bergstrom* El Monte
Frederick Sumner Brackett* Claremont
Doris Margaret Carver Los Angeles
William Thomas Melvin Cook Chino
Clarence Cooper* Pomona
Helen Laura Cowles Claremont
Philip Sheridan Danner* Pasadena
Darsie Lloyd Darsie Santa Ana
Mary Ailing Davies Los Angeles
Virginia Dearborn Riverside
Marafred Carolyn Durant Claremont
Alma Celia Evans Pomona
Edith May Evans Pasadena
William Lloyd Fletcher San Fernando
William Lawrence Gantz '. Pomona
Judith Margaret Garrison Claremont
Clara Belle Gilbert Pomona
Gladys Girton Orange
Winifred McPherson Goodrich Portland, Ore.
Charles Nathan Green Fair Haven, Mo.
Robert Morrison Hager Claremont
Irene Emily Hall Pomona
Estelle Hamilton Claremont
Agnes Ida Hammond Covina
Ethelyn Hampton Claremont
Marjorie Dayton Hitchcock Van Nuys
Lowell John Howe Chula Vista
Ruth Winthrop Humphrey Claremont
Eva Maye Hyde Claremont
Ida Marion Jenkins Ontario
Charlotte Mary Johnson North Pomona
Margaret May Jones Whittier
Shinsaku Katayama Marugame, Japan
Lola Kreighbaum Fullerton
Ruth Anna Ledig Alta Loma
* Graduated Februarv 1918.
ANNUAL REGISTER 17
Eleanor Allen Lee Claremont
Agnes Leek Claremont
Irene Leek Claremont
Harriet Lucile Mather Rivera
Charlotte Elizabeth AIcGee Pasadena
Ruby Vera Mehl Upland
Geneva Evadne Miller Pasadena
Grace Gray Miller .'. Pomona
Mary Miller Ontario
Rnth Olmstead Pomona
Joy Lorene Peck Pomona
Margaret Pendergast Carpinteria
Carroll Morris Pov\'ers Minneapolis, Minn.
Vera Rebecca Ranney Fullerton
Eleanor Sargent Claremont
Phebe Sheldon Ventura
Margaret Louise Siddall South Pasadena
Clifford Frank Smith La Verne
Gertrude Agnes Urton Pasadena
Ruth Agnes L'tt Claremont
Rose W'aldrcu * Los Angeles
Bruce McClain Wallace Claremont
Evelyn Weirick Pomona
Elwyn Haskell Welch Pomona
Clayton Earl Wells Saginaw^, Mich.
Edwin Pascal Whitney Claremont
Madge Wire Chino
Cecile Woods ^ Beverly Hills
JUNIOR CLASS
Vida Keziah Abrahams Downey
Russell Thurber Adams Monrovia
Edythe Nettie Backus Monrovia
Marion Ballantyne El Cajcn
Ruth Jeanette Bartlett La Verne
Flora Ruth Beaty Paso Robles
Dorotha Benham Pomona
Allen Carrier Blaisdell Claremont
Gladys Merle Bragg Corona
Charles Chester Brisco Anaheim
Reva Mildred Cartwright Santa Ana
Katherine Goldie Chace Wayne, Nebr.
Homer Campbell Chaney Pomona
Roy Kenneth Cole Whittier
Ruth Mary Colliags Claremont
Helen Genevieve Corwin Highland
IS POMONA COLLEGE
Martha Ethelyn Cowan Claremont
Mabel Elizabeth Coy Pasadena
Arline Davis Orange
Charles Corbin Devalon Pomona
Charles Stephen Dewey '. Whittier
George Burritt Dunham, Jr Redlands
Eileen Belle Edmondson Downey
Henson Whitlock Paris Ontario
Robert Norman Frantz Whittier
Alice Dorothy Freeman Upland
Annabelle Frink Chino
Ira Nobles Frisbee Ontario
Merle Arthur Frost La Mesa
William Waterman Frost La Mesa
Margaret Gaylord Claremont
Vernita Louise Gordy Pasadena
Grace Winifred Hamilton Claremont
Esther Viora Hess Upland
Grace Elizabeth Hoskins Claremont
Vincent Leeds Humeston Claremont
Helen Kathleen Jacobs Julian
Olga Margaret Johnson Fullerton
Hazel Verne Jones Ontario
Philip Leighton _ Covina
Agnes Louise Leonard Los Angeles
Phyllis Arlene Lord Riverside
Helena Irene Mackenzie Pomona
Eva Catherine McCarthy Claremont
Gertrude Beatrice McKinley Long Beach
Shirley Isabel Meacham Pasadena
Leonora Louise Miles Ramona
Edith Mitchell Claremont
Joe Eldridge Mitchell Pomona
Douglas Montgomery Pasadena
Kenneth Morgan Pomona
Marvin Morrison Santa Ana
Marjorie Lamson Morse Whittier
Kenneth Royal Murdoch Chino
Elsie May Myers Claremont
Florence Newman Chino
Edison Orr Dillon, Mont.
Alan Osbourne Claremont
Edwin Robert Parker Long Beach
Isabel Parker Fullerton
Maurice Perry Orange
Houston Peterson Los Angeles
ANNUAL, REGISTER 19
Stanley Welch Plummer Monrovia
Margaret Clinton Pooley Riverside
Catherine Johnson Rich Claremoeit
Margaret Winifred Robertson Santa Ana
Esther Frances Romick Claremont
Elizabeth Mills Scranton Riverside
Manila Seaver Pomona
Helen Sheets Claremont
Lucile Belmont Simmons Los Angeles
Anness McCutchen Sloss La Mesa
Bradford Bixbj' Smith Claremont
Margaret Stover Claremont
Lillian Frances Street Claremont
Robert Lobingier Strehle San Diego
Wallace Tate Riverside
Helen Cecilia Thorbecke Jerome, Ariz.
Marian Towt Lindsay
William Webster Vannier Sierra Madre
Nelson David Widmer Upland
Arthur Maurice Williams Houston, Tex.
Ruth Gladys Williams La Verne
Esther Louise Williams Pasadena
John Walter Williams San Diego
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Laurence Franklin Arnold Palms
Lillian Virginia Asher El Monte
Judith Elridge Barcus Pomona
Mildred Elinor Barnes Chula Vista
Laura Bonnie Batkin Long Beach
Grace Adelaide Bennis Rialto
Herman Stanley Bergstrom El Monte
Maude Esther Bird Santa Ana
Margaret Otis Blake Hayden, Ariz.
Mary Amanda Boardman Claremont
Horatio Abbey Borders Chicago, 111.
Charlotte Loretta Braginton Manson, la.
Florence Lorene Breckenridge Santa Ara
Louis Burchall Byram Hanford
Helen Louise Campbell Pomona
Frances ]\Iarie Carter Duarte
Susanna Case Claremont
Geoffrey Chu Chen KiangSu, China
Gladwvn Murrav Childs Los Angeles
Philip' Colton Childs Redlands
Anna Marie ChumI : Oxnard
20 POMONA COLLEGE
Perry Clark Clarcmont
Mabel Lee Cloyd Yuma, Ariz.
Merrell Dare Clubb Pomona
William Howard Coke Ontario
Horace Taylor Crocker Glencoe, 111.
Ethelwyn Beatrice Crockett Berkeley
Nannette Dauner Alhambra
Dorothy Dola Decker Pomona
Donald Eugene Dement San Diego
Frances Donnell Reedley
Nellie Eikelman San Bernardino
Henry Bruce Elliott Whittier
William Warren Elliott Whittier
Susie Robertina Erwin El Monte
Alice May Fesler Covina
Belle Amanda Fesler Covina
Irma Magdalene Eraser Pomona
Mary Apolline Fritz Pomona
Fay Gantz •. Pomona
Ella Anna Gemmell Claremont
Ellen Elizabeth Gilchrist Pasadena
Robert Cameron Gillingham Compton
Dorothy Hall Claremont
Helen Margaret Hamilton Pasadena
Lulu Bernice Harker Phoenix, Ariz.
Robert Daniel Harwood Claremont
Fern Gertrude Hawkins Pomona
Henrv Hetiderson San Dimas
Rita Henderson Butte, Mont.
Lloita Higbee Claremont
Gertrude Bouldin Hoar Los Angeles
Hall Gillam Holder Santee
Lova Gladys Holt Anaheim
Mildred Howe Long Beach
Edna Amelia Hull Los Angeles
Helen Marsraret Iredell Long Beach
Gertrude Edith Jennings Redlands
Clark Johnson San Diego
Gertrude Fern Jones Whittier
Tames McMillan Judy Claremont
Robert Parsons Judv — . Claremont
Wilbur El wood Kellum Burnett
A-fary Louise Kendall San Diego
}^7)7p\ Kimbell Riverside
Nellie Kimble Hanford
Laurence Ewing Knight Mendocino
ANNUAL REGISTER 21
Katherine Gray Laidlaw Ontario
Alary Ethel Lawrence Pomona
Helen Geneva Leopold Claremont
Berenice Livingston O.xnard
Evelyn May Lorbeer Claremont
Anita Evaline Lormer Pasadena
Lewis Forest Loveland Pomona
Mary Ethel Lyman Claremont
Richard George Manley Upland
Helen Mary Alather Rivera
LaSalle Almeron Maynard Claremont
W'ortha Joy Merritt Claremont
Alberta Aletzler Coachella
Helena Morrison Hollywood
\'alennice Edwin Noonan Ontario
Paul Howard Olmstead Pomona-
Lois Eleanor Peck , Claremont
James Kensey Peirsol Mendocino
Elizabeth Pell ' Claremont
Mabel Eleanor Perry San Gabriel
Margaret Alice Perry San Dimas
Leslie Peterson Pomona
George Caldwell Pooley Riverside
Edris Powlison Riverside
Allen Iredell Pretzman Columbus, Ohio
Eflie Marie Ransom Pomona
William Rempel Pasadena
Grace Evangeline Rensch Pasadena
Robert Meredith Riley Turlock
Genevieve Agnes Rimpau Los Angeles
Rhea Francisca Rimpau Holh^wood
Richard Gregory Ringo .— Bakersfield
Floy Louise Robinson Dinuba
lone Ross Pomona
Grace Elizabeth St. Clair Lordsburg
Gerald Emmons Sanford Claremont
Katherine Pauline Sargent Claremont
Arthur Shaffer -- Chino
Ada Allene Shepard Compton
Anna Katheriae Skeele Monrovia
ALarv Marjorie Smith Pomona
Lovd \'ictor Steere - - El Monte
W^illard Edward Stokes Phoenix, Ariz.
Estelle Louise Vandruff Huntington Beach
Wilna Veazey Claremont
Marguerite Caroline \\'aite Heniet
22 POMONA COLLEGE
Edward Jacob Wenig Pomona
Bertha Elizabeth White Chino
Ma.v Ruth Wiley National City
Carol Harriet Willisford Glendale
Alfreda Delight Wright Chihuahua, Mex.
Marion Leland Wyman Claremont
Helen Marie Beery San Diego
Edna Cheshire Brown Manson, la.
Erma Viola Brown Manson, la.
Jeanette Chaney Pomona
Neva Marguerite Clevenger Claremont
Wilbur Smith Coke Ontario
Raymond Bridgman Cowles Claremont
Elwyn Breckenridge Crosswhite Claremont
Henry Franzen Canton, Kans.
Arthur Fay Gillette .<.i.... La Verne
Robert Marvin Greathouse Santa Ana
Gladys Howard Phoenix, Ariz.
Young Oak Kang Claremont
Clair Evans Kirk Upland
Franklin C. H. Lee Tungchow, China
Henriette Loba Ontario
Lillus Katherine Middagh Walnut
Marion Adella Patterson Burnett
Ralph Shallenberger Santa Ana
Clarence Theodore Stover Claremont
Earle Clarence Thomas LIpland
Blanche Towne Gardoia
Charles Russell Weaver Twin Falls, Ida.
Helen Dorothy Woods Beverly Hills
FRESHMAN CLASS
Gaylord Bryan Abraham Gaston, Ore.
Esther Anderson Long Beach
Ruth Elizabeth Ashton Claremont
Margaret Averbeck Pomona
Willis Raymond Bailard Carpinteria
Margaret Baker Monrovia
Eda Maria Beatty Covina
Victor Hugo Benioff Claremont
Ruth Manerva Bennett Hollywood
Mildred Genevieve Berry Covina
Lucile White Bird Orange
Victor Edwin Bird Deadwood. S. Dak.
ANNUAL REGISTER 23
Ruth Estelle Brant Riverside
Aluriel Ruth Brenner Pomona
Bessie May Brock Pomona
Arthur Milton Butcher Claremont
Marion EHzaheth Campbell Ontario
Caroline Prescott Canbj' San Fernando
Ruth Louise Carpenter Coronado
Dorothy Canfield Case Claremont
Millicent Mitchell Childs ■. Los Angeles
Robert Gregory Clark Cheyenne, Wyo.
Lillian Sneath Coleman '. Pasadena
Mary Garnett Conley El Centro
Mabel Alice Coontz Pomona
William Charles Cooper Pomona
Mary Kloss Daggs Claremont
Mary Allen Davis Corcoran
John Donald DeWitt .'. La Verne
Mabel Katherine Dula San Diego
Meh-yuin Dziao Shantung, China
Elmer Newton Eddy Glendora
Robert Vaughan Edwards Pocatello, Ida.
Ruth Ewald Claremont
Buena Vista Ferrell Hemet
Alta Elizabeth Fesler Covina
Lois Hunt Field Pomona
Florence Gertrude Force Claremont
Lillian May Fox San Diego
Mary Ellen Freyer Pasadena
Wayne Bailey Gardner Claremont
Julia Ammon Getz Hollywood
Laura Magdalene Getz Hollywood
Harriet Lavinia Glazier Los Angeles
Anna Vera Good Fullerton
Joanna Margaret Goodnow Lcmg Beach
Howard Frederick Guthery Marion, Ohio
Isabel Ellen Henry Chamberlin, S. Dak.
Jewell Dorothy Hickox Santa Ana
Margaret Hill La Mesa
Margaret Elizabeth Hills Santa Monica
Martha Muriel Hills Santa Monica
Helen Hoffman Long Beach
Edith May Hoffmaster Pomona
Janet Love Hohl Ontario
Constance Marguerite Hoover El Centro
Ada Marie Hoy Santa Ana
Wilbur Schofieid Hulin Claremont
24 POMONA COLLEGE
Edith Vaniva Hull Long Beach
Kathrina Jameson Washington, D. C.
Helen Dale Jennings Redlands
Edith Jewell San Dimas
Clive White Johnson Pomona
Gertrude Kent Prescott, Ariz.
John Chester King Claremont
Katherine Lucas King Pomona
Mary Margaret King Prescott, Ariz.
Ruth Hazel Kirkland Long Beach
Ruth Land Phoenix, Ariz.
Zelma Langdon Ontario
Doris Dann Leopold Claremont
Florence Belle Lormer Pasadena
Alice Louise Love Pomona
Katharine Mahafifey Redlands
Olive Caroline Marsh '. Pomona
John Sedberry Marshall Fullerton
Lucile Matthews Covina
Marion Thomasine Mattison Long Beach
Geneva Fannie McConnell Claremont
Helen Grace Mertz Ontario
Esther Ruth Miller Los Angeles
Fern Elizabeth Miller Lakeside
Mildred Adele Milliken Claremont
Torrence Raymond Moreman LIpland
Edward Winfield . Morrison Los Angeles
Genevieve Margaret Olds Gardena
Gertrude Caryl Olds Gardena
James Roland Ovington Pomona
Howard Painter Los Angeles
Mildred Bertha Palmer Claremcnt
Bettie Barcus Patton Orange
Madge Peirsol Mendocino
Alma Cook Perry San Dimas
Hazel Gertrude Potter Covina
Helen Albertine Powell Highland
Margaret Cunningham Rae Alhamlira
Ethel Martha Rice Hanford
John Winchester Rich Claremont
Melvin Clay Rich Pomona
Elizabeth Titus Richards Claremont
Ardis Richardson Ontario
Clarke Theodore Richardson Bisbee, Ariz.
Richard Chamberlin Robertson Milwaukee, Wis.
Theresa Marian Robinson Claremont
ANNUAL REGISTER 25
Concha Romero Chihuahua, Alex.
Alarjorie EUzabeth Sadler Lindsay
Ruth Verena Schroeder Santa Ana
EHzabeth Schroeter Reedley
Paul Shafer Hanford
Travis Shelton Long Beach
\\ alton Roland Smith Monrovia
Clara Elizabeth Smyth Reno, Nev.
Lena Spake Pasadena
Alary Helen Sterrett Lindsay
Rachel Nita Stillvvell South Pasadena
Alarie Sweet Riverside
Alargaret Octavia Thompson Alhambra
Newton Edward Thompson Alhambra
Alargaret Julia Todd La Alesa
Jessie Hardy Virtue Long Beach
Albert Clarke Walker Redvale, Colo.
Gladys VVatters Lindsay
Alattie Welsh Anaheim
Leslie Allen Wheeler Holtville
Lula Elsie White Rivera
Mildred Josephine Wight Los Angeles
Edna Alay Wilbur Los Angeles
Gladys Irene Wilkinson Pasadena
Frances Wright Los Angeles
Hortense Elizabeth Wrockloff Pomona
Aliles Dewey Allen Claremont
Harold Abbott Bartlett Pomona
Berry Gold Bayley Riverside
Dorothy Bennett Los Angeles
Alarjorie Rowena Bentley Claremont
Frederick Rodgers Birney Las Animas, Colo.
Alyrle Borthwick Chino
Joseph Alexander Caldwell Claremont
Lutie Lavinia Carpenter Claremont
John Ward Casey Brawley
Pao Tai Chang Shanghai, China
Pearl Frances Clark Worland, Wyo.
Leonard Jackson Colbern Claremont
Lucile Council South Pasadena
Edward Covington Santa Ana
Cecil Alford Crabb Phoenix, Ariz.
George Cree Claremont
Dee Ephraim DeLapp North Pomona
Alice Elizabeth Dodge Fresno
26 POMONA COLLEGE
Millard LeVant Dodge Lancaster
Albert Lee Drake Fullerton
Ruth Marguerite Dudley ..—'"- Corona
Edythe Elizabeth Ernst Claremcat
Everett Esterly* Pomona
Eleanor Martha Ferguson Coachella
Harold Bailard Franklin : Carpinteria
Richard Karl Gandy Coronado
Mary Gardner Claremont
Walter Grossman Gastil .-. San Diego
LaRoy Gilbert* Oxnard
Anna Bertha Gillen Claremont
Laura Byrlle Graham Venice
Alice von Hagen Los Angeles
Allen Hastings Claremont
Harold Headley West Jefferson, Ohio
Walter Heathman Pomona
Frederick William Hoffman San Jacinto
Inis Huttoii Hubbard Lancaster
Evangeline deBeaupre Hunchberger Glendale
Helen Hutchinson Claremont
Aileen Johnson Oxnard
Miriam Elizabeth Kalb Monrovia
Howard Kincaid i Cucamonga
Araxie Keoseyan* Selma
Andrew Kitaru Kita Osaka, Japan
Lucille Gladys Krause Anaheim
Margaret Helene LaGrange Los Angeles
Eugene LeBaron, Jr '. Brawley
Robert Ross Leishman Caspar
Irving Bruce Long La Verne
Lois Hazel Long Thermopolis, Wyo.
Mary Elizabeth Lowstetter Pasadena
Harry Kinley Martin Los Angeles
Rena Martin Oceanside
Herbert Daniel McCarthy Claremont
Jessie Frances McCord Cottage Grove, Ore.
Margarette McCully ' Corctia
Donald Charles Meadows Orange
Christine Miller Newport Beach
Dorothy Moles Clareiriont
Ruth Newby Pasadena
Parke Crowder Oliver Claremont
Marshall Simpson Orr Reno, Nev.
* Nevk^ students entering second semester.
ANNUAL REGISTER 27
Gordon Waldo Park San Bernardino
Howard Hunt Pattee Los Angeles
Earle Kinne Powers Minneapolis, Miru.
Alberto Rembao Alhambra
Aaron Rutherford Claremont
Gensag Santikian Fowler
Roland Schlatter Pomona
Montelle Hoffine Springstead El Cajon
Joy van Fleet Stanford San Diego
.\rthur Robert Tyler* Pomcua
Charles Albert Vaile Claremont
Ruth Margaret Vandevert Claremont
Nita Lorraine \\ alton Orange
Eleanor Warner Long Beach
Lucien Hynes Warner White Plains, N. Y.
Faith Katharine Wendell Los Angeles
Frederick Sherwood Wheaton* Sari Diego
Halsted Guilford White Claremont
Theda Melvene White Chino
Gwynn Alarvin Wilson* Pomona
Frances Loraine Winslow Pasadena
Harold Wire Chino
William Brown W orden Hollywood
Joseph Reece-Worthington Denison, Tex.
Hilda Mabelle Wright Azusa
SPECI.\L STCDEXTS
Eleanor Hill Ament (Modern Language) Claremont
Annie Cornelia Bannister (Music) La Verne
]\Iarie Margaret Becker (Art) Claremont
Ruth Bell (Music) Ontario
Gladys Hoskins Bernard (Music) Claremont
^Maude Genevieve Brenner (Art) Pomona
Edith D3-kstra Hartley (Modern Language) Claremont
Laura Mae Holcomb (Music) Corona
Harold Franklin Humbert (Music) Eugene, Ore.
Helena Grace Johnson (Music) North Pomona
Ethel S. Lyman (Modern Language) Claremont
Lucia Hull Xeely (English) Claremont
Mary Abigail Neister (English) Pomona
Laurel Parker (Physical Education) Los Angeles
Hazel Marie Powers (Modern Language), Alinneapolis, Minn.
Helen Rutherford (Music) Pasadena
Mildred Shafer (Music) Pomona
* New students entering the second semester.
28 POMONA COLLEGE
Helen Weir Shanks (Music) Pomona
Sophie Seymour Stearns Claremont
Louise Stover (Music) Claremont
Margaret Trauger (Music) Lindsay
Bruce McClain Wallace (Military Science) Claremont
SUMMARY
Graduate Students 9
Seniors 71
Juniors 85
Sophomores 144
Freshmen 217
Specials 22
Total 54S
ANNUAL REGISTER 29
DEGREES, HONORS AND PRIZES
Degrees Conferred in 1917
MASTER OF ARTS
IN ECONOMICS AND SOCIOLOGY
William Webb Clary, Los Angeles
B.A., Pomoua College
IN BOTANY
Lois Mildred Clenc}-, Claremont
B.A., Pomona College
Hiram Harwood Tracj^, Fullerton
B.A., Pomoua College; B.S., Leland Stanford
Junior University
IN ZOOLOGY
Harvey Harlow Nininger, Lordsburg
B.A., McPherson College
BACHELOR OF ARTS
Magna Cum Laude
Ada Alberta Black, Santa Ana
Jesse Christian Brandt, Lordsburg
Margaret Edith Faires, Claremont
Margaret DeMotte Overholtzer, Claremont
Paul Edward Schwab, Ontario
Mabel Ayretta Stanford, Claremont
Genevieve Newman Vredenburg, Chino
Cum Laude
Ethel Pauline Allen, Claremont
Henry Reavis Barcus, Pomona
Mary Frances Beck, National City
Robert James Bernard, Claremont
Elmo Hansford Conley, El Centro
Florence Mildred Dodge, Claremont
Paul McLean Dowling, San Dimas
Raymond Morgan Elliott, Santa Ana
Ruth Emily Epling, Lordsburg
Harper Wine Frantz, Elgin, 111.
Mary Ellen Fredendall, Pomona
Stella Marcia Gammctn, Pasadena
FOMOXA COL'LEGE
Helena May Goodale, Analieim
William Ferguson Hamilton, Orosi
Helen Felicitas Haury, Upland
Otis Townsend Hiatt, Ceres
Marjorie Rood Kennedy, Pomona
Edith Kingman, Claremont
Hazel Avis McClees, Claremont
Clara Belle McConnell, Claremont
Charles Eddy Orcutt, San Diego
Wesley Lee Paul, Huntington Beach
Orrin Warner Robinson, Dinuba
Chalmer Brumbaugh Shaver, Covina
Amelia Ora Smith, Claremont
Helen Hope Sturges, Claremont
Jerome Bonaparte Walden, Claremont
Richard Carlisle Waltz, Ontario
Paul Edward Webb, Pomona
Florence Mary Wilson, Los Angeles
Lola May Wire, Chino
Rite
Jessie Gladys Bailard, Carninteria
Katharine Fairchild Ball, Santa Barbara
Wayne LeRoy Bell, Claremont
Marianne Elizabeth Bidelman, Los Angeles
Henry Levi Bray, Taft
Clarence Wilbur Brock, Pomona
Winifred Estelle Bullock, Rivera
Hazel-Gene Burnham, San Diego
Mary Ruth Carothers, Pomona
Margaret Cate, Florence
Ruth Caroline Chamberlin, Long Beach
Wilbur Kirkpatrick Cobb, Tulare
William Harold Cree, Claremont
Ray Frederick Cromer, LTpland
Mabel Clair Day, Claremont
Carol Marguerite Dodd, Pomona
Bruce Allyn Findlay, Los Angeles
Rachel Sarah Fryer, Pomona
Vera Ramona Gammon, Pasadena
Carroll Eugene Gemmg, Pomona
Edmund Sheldon Gerry, Ventura
Allison Bryce Given, Covina
William Marshal Greathouse, Santa Ana
Marjorie Harris, Pomona
Marv Louise Harris, Santa Ana
ANNUAL REGISTER 31
Harold Coy Haymond, Pasadena
Nan Elizabeth Houghton, Rivera
Robert Loring Keyes, Claremont
Orpha Florence Lorbeer, Claremont
John Lomax Love, Pomona
Mabel JNIansur, Santa Ana
Sidney Anne McClees, Claremocit
Helen Camp McDonald, Long Beach
Carl Clifton Mead, Claremont
Sarah Leah Myers, Compton
Dorothy Louise Neely, Claremont
Faustina Nenno, Fullerton
Eleanor Okell, Xorv\-alk
Gertrude Colfax Palmer, North Pomona
Bobbie Routh Pickett, Pomona
Lewis Clifford Plush, Pomona
Elsie Aran Randall, W'hittier
William Harold Rapson, Claremont
Charles Sumner Reynolds, Lapland
Anna Belle Robinson, Claremont
Warren Sumner Rogers, Los Angeles
Smith Lafayette Russell, Claremont
Marjorie Isabel Shaw, Claremont
Carl Shepard, Compton
Earle Valentine Skinner, San Bernardino
Georgia Victoria Smith, Santa Ana
Mabel Wright Spooner, Pomona
Weaker Edgar Stafford, Santa Ana
Harry E. Staples, Claremont
Anna Abigail Stewart, Claremont
Walter Eugene Coe Sturges, Claremont
Lillian Mathilda Svenson, Los Angeles
Elizabeth Hayden Taylor, Ontario
Motida Louise Taylor, El Alonte
Marion Skinner Warren, Covina
James David Weinland, Banning
Florence lone Wilson, Artesia
John Dick Young, Claremont
32
POMONA COLLEGE
Honors Awarded in 1916-1917
HIGH HONORSt
Names of students who averaged two or more credits per
hour taken and who did not fall below "B" grade in any
course. (I and H refer to first and second semesters.)
Senior Class
Robert James Bernard I
Ada Alberta Black I
Jesse Christian Brandt I
Elmo Hansford Conley I
Ruth Emily Epling I
Margaret Edith Faires I
Harper Wine Frantz I
Marjorie Rood Kennedy I
Edith Kingman I
Margaret DeMotte Overholtzer I
Marcia Clarice Spear I
Mabel Ayretta Stanford I
Junior Class
Rodney Fremont Atsatt I
Mary Faye Beaty I
Frederick Sumner Brackett H
Laura Helen Cowles I, H
Mary Ailing Davies I, H
Virginia Dearborn I, II
William Lawrence Gamtz I
Clara Belle Gilbert H
Estelle Hamilton I
Eleanor Allen Lee L H
Agnes Leek I, H
Faith Lelia Nelson I, H
Phebe Sheldon I, H
Edmund Parker Stone L H
Ruth Agnes Utt* I
Sophomore Class
Russell Adams I
Alfred Block H
t In the assignment of honors the work in Physical Education
is disregarded except that all honor students must be
maintaining at least a B grade in that subject.
* Registered for 6 hours.
ANNUAL REGISTER 33
Mary Amanda Boardman** I ,11
Alice Dorothy Freeman I, II
Margaret Gaylord II
Francis Raymond Iredell I, II
Helen Kathleen Jacobs II
Kenneth Royal Mnrdoch II
Helen Marie Nielson II
Elizabeth Mills Scranton II
Bradford Bixln- Smith I
Robert Douglas Whitson I, II
Esther Louise Williams II
Freshman Class
Margaret Otis Blake I, II
Geoffrey Chu Chen, I, II
Merreir Dare Clubb I, II
Clark Johnson II
Mary Ethel Lyman II
Alan Osbourne I
Mabel Eleanor Perry I
Harrj' Prentice St. Clair II
Carol Harriet Willisford II
GENERAL HONORS
Names of students who earned within at least three of twice
as many credits as hours taken, and who did not fall below
"B" grade in any course.
Senior Class
Wayne LeRoy Bell I
Marianne Elizabeth Bidelman I
Florence Mildred Dodge I
Mary Ellen Fredendall I
Helena May Goodale I
Orpha Florence Lorbeer I
Sidney Anne McClees I
Dorothy Louise Neely I
Charles Eddy Orcutt I
Gertrude Colfax Palmer* I
Wesley Lee Paul I
William Harold Rapson I
Orrin Warren Robinson I
* Registered for 6 hours.
Registered for 10 hours.
34 POMONA COLLEGE
Paul Edward Schwab I
Genevieve Newman Vredenbiirgh I
Richard Cadisle Waltz I
Lola May \^''ire I
Junior Class
Mary Faye Beaty II
Heber Hovey Clewett II
Alma Celia Evans I, II
\\'illiam Lawrence Gantz II
Edward Martin Gibbs I
Clara Belle Gilbert I
Robert Morrison Hager I, II
Ida Marion Jenkins II
Florence Anna Johnson I
Ruth Anna Ledig II
Charlotte Elizabeth McGee II
Edna Anne Spalding II
Elwyn Haskell Welch** I
Madge Wire I '
Sophomore Class
Russell Thurber Adams II
Allen Carrier Blaisdell II
Gladys Merle Bragg I
Homer Chaney I, II
Helen Genevieve Corwin II
Philip Hayden Davenport I
Ira Nobles Frisbee II
Charles Neil Gemmill II
Hazel Verne Jones I, II
Winifred Moore*** I
Maurice Perry I
Catherine Johnson Rich I, II
Anness McCutchen Sloss I, II
Lucy Frances Smith** I
Louise Williams I
Freshman Class
Judith Eldridge Barcus II
Maude Esther Bird I
Nannette Dauner I
Elma Dilg I
** Registered for 12 hours.
*** Registered for 9 hours.
ANNUAL, REGISTER
35
Alice Ma_\- Fcsler II
Alary Apolline Fritz I
Robert Cameron Gillingham II
Alice von Hagen* II
Gertrude Bouldin Hoar II
Edua Amelia Hull II
Clark lohnson I
Wilbur Edwood Kellum* II
Alary Etbel Lyman I
Alabel Eleanor Perry II
Carol Harriet Dillisford I
Special Departmental Honors
Names of students wbo attained "AA" grade in at least one
course, and wbo did not fall below "B" in any otber course.
Senior Class
Robert James Bernard I
Ada Alberta Black I
Jesse Christian Brandt I
Hazel-Gene Burnbam I
Elmo Hansford Conley I
Alargaret Edith Faires I
Harper Wine Frantz I
Nan Elizabeth Houghton I
Alarjorie Rood Kennedy I
Edith Kingman I
Orpha Florence Lorbeer I
Alargaret DeAIotte Overholtzer I
Orrin Warren Robinson I
Alabel Avretta Stanford I
Philosophy B23
English D5
English C7
Philosophy C25
English B3
Economics C5
Physiology B3
Zoology D15
Psychology C7
English B3a
English C7
Cbemistr\- Cll
Art B9 ■
French DS
Spanish C23
Psychology C7
Physical Education C33
Psychology C7
English C7
Geclney C3
English B3a
Junior Class
Rodney Fremont Atsatt Physiology,' D7
Chemistry C9
Registered for less than 15 hours but more thr-n 12
36
POMONA COLLEGE
Frederick Sumner Brackett
Helen Laura Cowles
Mary Ailing Davies
Virginia Dearborn
William Lawrence Gantz
Clare Belle Gilbert
Winifred McPherson Goodrich
Estelle Hamilton
Ruth Anna Ledig
Eleanor Allen Lee
Agnes Leek
Charlotte Elizabeth AIcGee
Faith Lelia Nelson
Phebe Sheldon
Edmund Parker Stone
Rose Waldron
Mathematics D22
Astronomy C2
Physiology B3, B4
French D5, D6
Spanish B21
French C4
Spanish C23,^ C24
Spanish C24'
Economics C25
Spanish D26
Physical Education C33
English B3a
Physiology D8
Psychology C6
French A2
Astronomy C2
French B3, D6, C4'
Mathematics D21, D22
Mathematics B15
Physiology B3, B4
French D6, D8'
Italian B32
German B3
Economics C25
Ps-rhology Bl, C8
Philosophy B24
History C15, C16
Philosophy B24
\'oice
Sophomore
Alfred Block
Mary Amanda Boardman*
Margaret Gaylord
Francis Raymond Iredell
Helen Kathleen Jacobs
Olga Johnson
Agnes Louise Leonard
Kenneth Royal Murdoch
Helen Marie Nielson
Class
Mathematics
French AL
Art B9
Italian B32
Bible B3
Economics Bl, B2
Philosophy B24
Psychology
Economics
Piano
Art B9
German C20
Economics B2
A2
A2
Bl
B22
* Registered for 10 hours.
ANNUAL REGISTER
37
Maurice Amandns Perry
Bradford Bixby Smith
Robert Douglas Whitson
Esther Louise W'ilUams
Martha Hatch Winslow
Chemistry B3
Chemistry Al
French D6
Psychology C6
Spanish C24
English A22a
Psychology B2
German B14
Freshman Class
Judith Eldridge Barcus
Alaude Esther Bird
Lester Lynwood Black
Margaret Otis Blake
Geoflfrey Chu Chen
Merrell Dare Clubb
Horace Taylor Crocker*
Ethelwyn Beatrice Crockett
Elma Dilg
Robert Cameron Gillingham
Alice von Hagen'*'
Gertrude Bouldin Hoar
Lova Gladys Holt
Edna Amelia Hull
Clark Johnson
Wilbur Ed wood Kellum*
Katherine Gray Laidlaw
EAelyn May Lorbeer
Mary Ethel Lyman
Alan Osbounne
Mabel Eleanor Perry
Harry Prentice St. Clair
Edison Lothair Teetor
Carol Harriet W'illisford
English A22a
Chemistry A3
Physiolog}' A2
English A2
.Botany B22
Physiology A2
History A17, A18
English A21a
Chemistry Al, z\4
Latin B6
Physiology A2
English A22a
French A2
English A22a
English A22a
Bible A2
English A22a
Piano
English A22a
PhysiologA' A2
French A2
English A22a
English A22b
English A22b
English A22a
^Mohammedanism
Chemistry A3
Chemistry A3
Chemistry B33, B36
Chemistry B6
Graphics A2
Graphics A2
Chemistry A4
Physiology Al
* Registered for less than 15 hours but more than 12.
>SS POMONA COLLEGE
Prizes Awarded 1916-1917
THE HOME ORATORICAL CONTEST PRIZES
Bruce McClain Wallace, Claremont
Chalmer Brumbaugh Shaver, Covina
THE WOMEN'S ORATORICAL CONTEST PR I Z US
(Not given)
THE VAILE PRIZES
(Not given)
THE LORBEER PRIZES
(Not given)
THE MONCRIEFF PRIZE IN ASTRONOMY
Frederick Sumner Brackett, Claremont
THE GEORGE A. GATES PRIZE
(Not given)
THE DOLE DEBATE PRIZES
Ruth Mary Collings, Claremont
Russell Thurston Adams, Monrovia
THE LLEWELLYN BIXBY MATHEMATICS PRIZE
Wilson Arnett, Ontario
THE MUDGE LATIN PRIZE
(Not given)
THE KINNEY DECLAMATION PRIZES
Wilbur Sturtevant Nye, Covina
Cheng Tsai, Peking, China
THE HAGER MISSIONARY PRIZES
Rachel Sarah Fryer, Pomctia
Edward Raj- Himrod, Pomona
a
Eau^it u^o. ^1^
Pomona College
Annual Register
1918— 1919
CLAREMONT
CALIFORNIA
POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
PUBLISHED BI-MONTHLY BY POMONA COLLEGE
Entered at the PostofUce, Claremonl, Cai, as second-class matter
Vol. XVI MARCH, 1919 No. 2
THIRTY-FIRST YEAR
Pomona College
ANNUAL REGISTER
of the officers, teachers and
students of Pomona College
for the year 1918- 1919
March, 1919
CLAREMONT. CALIFORNIA
Published by the College
4« (ij^
CALENDAR
1919
JANUARY
FEBRUARY
MARCH
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OCTOBER
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COLLEGE CALENDAR
1919
February 10, Monday
February 22, Saturday
March 12, Wednesday
March 22, Saturday
March 31, Monday
May 30, Friday
June 16, Monday
to
June 21, Saturday
June 23, Monday
Second Semester begins, 7:30 a. m.
Washington's Birthday, a Holiday
Matriculation Day.
Spring Recess begins, 12:00 m.
Spring Recess ends, 10:30 a. m.
Memorial Day
Final Examinations
Commencement
Summer Vacation
September 22, Monday ] Registration Days. Monday and
8ej)tember 23, Tuesday !- Tuesday, examinations for en-
September 2'i, Wednesday ) trance
September 2), Wednesday First Chapel Service, 10:30 a. m.
POMONA COLLEGE
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
George W. Marston, President San Diego
Rt. Rev. Joseph H. Johnson, d.d., Vice-President Los Angeles
Rev. Charles B. Sumner, ll. d., Secretary Claremont
Charles E. Walker, Treasurer Los Angeles
Term of Office Expires, June, 1919
James A. Blaisdell, d.d., Claremont
Charles E. Harwood, ll. d. Upland
Rev. Charles B. Sumner, ll. d. Claremont
W. H. R. Weldon South Pasadena
Fred M. Wilcox Lamanda Park
Term of Office Expires, June, 1920
Llewellyn Bixby
Eli p. Clark
WiNFRED E. Garrison, ph. d.
William F. Holt
George W. Marston
Term of Office Expires, June, 1921
Rev. Frank M. Dowling
Rt. Rev. Joseph H. Johnson, d. d.
Frederick W. Lyman
Butler A. Woodford
Francis C. Yeomans
Term of Office Expires, June, 1922
Rev. Raymond C. Brooks, d. d.
Edwin F. Hahn
Stephen H. Herrick
Seeley W. Mudd
Rev. William O. Wakk
Long Beach
Los Angeles
Claremont
Van Nuys
San Diego
Anaheim
Los Angeles
Pasadena
Claremont
Long Beach
Berkeley
Pasadena
Riverside
Los Angeles
Pomona
Term of Office Expires, June, 1923
Charles E. Walker Los Angeles
Rev, William Horace Day, d. d. Bridgeport, Conn.
Arthur M. Dole Pomona
Rev, Henry Kingman, d. d. Claremont
William S. Mason Evanston, 111,
Ernest E. Jones, Business Manager
Claremont
ANNUAL, REGISTER
Committees of the Board
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Jamks a. Blaisdell, Chairman
Charles B. Sumxer, Secretary
Arthur M. Dole Charles E. Harwood
Edwin F. Hahn Charles E. Walker
Butler A. Woodford
COMMITTEE ON INVESTMENTS
Charles E. Walker George W. Marstox
Eli p. Clark Fred M. Wilcox
Ernest E. Jones, Business Manager
COMMITTEE ON WAYS AND MEANS
Frederick W. Lyman Eli P. Clark
Joseph H. Johnson Stephen H. Herrick
Jajies a. Blaisdell Henry Kingman
WiLLLiAJi F. Holt William S. Mason
Seeley W. Mudd
COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION
James A. Blaisdell Frank M. Do\\t,ing
Llewellyn Bixby Winfred E. Garrison
Edwin F. Hahn
COMMITTEE ON BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS^
Charles B. Sumner George W. Marston
William S. Mason
COMMITTEE ON NOMINATIONS
Joseph H. Johnson Arthur M. Dole
James A. Blaisdell
James P. Jamieson / , , .^ ^
Robert H. Orr Architects
'In conjunction with a committee of the Facu'ty.
POMONA COLLEGE
FACULTY
James Arnold Blaisi>ell, m.a., d.u.
President
345 College Ave,
Cyrus Grandison Baldwin, d.d.
President Emeritus
Palo Alto
Edwin Clarence Norton, ph.d., d.d. 137 W. Seventh St.
Dean of the Faculty and Professor of the Greek Language and
Literature on the Edwin Clarence Norton Foundation
Frank ParkhurstBrackett, m.a. 270 E. Third St.
Professor of Mathematics on the Frank Parkhurst Brackett
Foundation and Director of the Observatory
Phebe Estelle Spalding, ph.d. 261 W. Fifth St.
Professor of English Literature on the Phebe Estelle
Spalding Foundation
Daniel Herbert Colcord, m.a. 157 E. Seventh St.
Professor of the Latin Language and Literature
Arthur Dart Bissell. m,a.
Professor of German
319 Harvard Ave.
George Gale Hitchcock, b.a.
Professor of Physics
721 College Ave.
George Stedman Sumner, ph.d. 105 College Ave.
Professor of Economics and Sociology on the Stedman-
Sumner Foundation
Charles Cummings Stearns, m.a. 146 E. Tenth St.
Professor of Biblical History and Literature on the Nancy
M. Lyon Foundation
ANNUAL REGISTER 7
Grace Ella Berry, m.a. Sumner Hall
Dean of Women and Assistant Professor of Mathematics
James Alexander Lyman, ph.d. 833 Indian Hill Blvd.
Professor of Chemistry
Milton Erastus Churchill, litt.d. 507 Yale Ave.
Secretary of the Faculty and Associate Professor of German
Mendal Garbutt Frampton, m.a. 927 Harvard Ave.
Professor of the English Language
Charles Gracchus Neely', b.l. 739 College Ave.
Professor of Constitutional History and Law
William Atwood Hilton, ph. d. 1264 Dartmouth Ave.
Professor' of Zoology on the Willard George Halstead
Foundation
Willis Allen Parker, ph.d.^ 545 Indian Hill Boulevard
Professor of Philosophy
Bernard Capen Ewer, ph.d. 339 Yale Ave.
Professor of Psychology
Ralph Haine Lyman, b.a. 357 W. Tenth St.
Professor of Applied Music and Instructor in Singing.
Head of the Department of Music
William Forbes Cooley, ph.d. 730 Harvard Ave.
Exchange Professor of Philosophy
William Polk Russell, m.a. 506 E. Sixth St.
Associate Professor of Mathematics on the Joseph W. Fiske
Foundation
'Absent on leave, 1918-1919.
S POMONA COLLEGE
Maro Beath Jones, m.a. 428 Yale Av6-
Associate Professor of Romance Languages
Arthur Volney Stoughton, m.d. 146 W. Seventh St.
Associate Professor of Physiology and Hygiene, and College
Physician
Waldemar Christian WesTergaard. ph.d. 135 E. Ninth St.
Associate Professor of History on the Warren F. Day
Foundation
Hannah Tempest Jenkins Claremont Inn
Assistant Professor of Art and Design
Robert TrEsilian Belcher, b.a, 169 W. Sixth St,
Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Engineering
Walter Alfred Allen, b.a., b.mus, 131 E. Tenth St,
Assistant Professor of Musical Theory and Appreciation,
and Instructor in Organ
Laura Charlton Squire\ b.a. 248 W. Seventh St-
Assistant Professor of Physical Education for Women
Edward Payson BartletT\ ph.d.
Assistant Professor of Chemistry
William Sheffield Ament^ m.a, 1130 Harvard Ave,
Assistant Professor of English
Victor Edward Marriott, m.a. 116 Twelfth St,
Librarian
Irving OTis PECKfcR\ b.a.
Assistant Professor of Romance Languages
^Absent on leave in war sei'vice.
ANNUAL REGISTER 9
WiLLiAjr Holland Matlock\ ph.b. 246 E. Second St.
Assistant Professor of German
Homer Elmer Roebins. pii.n. Harrison and Berkeley Aves.
Assistant Professor of Ancient Languages
Walter Eakle Hartley, i a., l.mus. 248 W. Tenth St.
Assistant Professor of Organ and Piano
Carl Peter Schott. b.e., b.p.e. 325 W. Sixth St.
Assistant Professor of Physical Education for Men
Philip Alexander Munz% ph.d. Smiley Hall
Assistant Professor of Botany
Amaxdus Zoellxer • 346 Yale Ave.
Assista7it Professor of Violin
George Samuel Burgess, b.a.. .t.d. Claremont Inn
Assistant Professor of Political Economy
Frank David Thojison. m.a. 338 Harvard Ave.
Assistant Professor of Accounting and Commercial Subjects
Reginald Pole. r.a. Los Angeles
Director of Dramatics
Mable Clair West. b.s. 1016 Columbia Ave
Instructor in Piano
Harriet Pasmore, b.a. 132 E. Second St.
Instructor in Singing
^Absent on leave in war service.
-Absent on leave in war service till January 1, 1919.
10 POMONA COLLEGE
Alfred Oswald Woodford, b.a. 639 Yale Ave.
Instructor in Chemistry and Geology
Marcia Clarice Spear, b.a. 246 E. Second St.
Instructor in Physical Education for Women
Helen Felicitas Haury, b.a. 272 W. Seventh St.
Instructor in Chemistry
Genevieve Newman Vredenburgh, b.a. 352 W. Fourth St.
Instructor in Romance Languages
Jerome Gazzo Claremont Inn
Instructor in Romance Languages
Marjorie Dayton Hitchcock, b.a. 231 W. Sixth St.
Instructor in English
Florence Dodge Russell, b.a. 517 Indian Hill Blvd.
Assistant in Piano
Winifred McPherson Goodrich, b.a. 407 Harvard Ave.
Assistant in Physical Education for Women
ANNUAL REGISTER
11
Co-operating Faculty, 1918-19
Hakoli) Eugene Billings, m.s. Alhambra
Chemistry
Charles Davidson, ph.d.
I English
Percy B. Goodell, ai.s.
Botany
George Carter Griswolo, ph.d.
English
ISABELL A. HOLDEN
Phcwmacy
Edith Patten, r.n. Pomona Valley Hospital
Elementary Nursing
707 College Ave.
1278 Yale Ave.
Mesa Ave.
320 Harvard Ave.
Rev. Henry K. Wingate, m.l. 1166 Columbia Ave.
On the Henry D Porter Foundation
Mathematics
D. F. Dunster'
General Secretary, Y. U. C. A.
Clifford Nott Hand% b.l. 130 E. Seventh St.
General Secretary, Y. M. C. A.
'Till January 1, 1919.
=From January 1, 1919.
12 POMONA COLLEGE
Military Staff
STUDENTS' ARMY TRAINING CORPS
Charles Berakd Vogdes. Major, U. S. A., Retired
Claremont Inn
Commanding Officer
Eugene White Nixon, b.a.. Second Lieutenant,
Infantry, U. S. A. 219 W. Sixth St.
Personnel Adjutant
Thomas Davis, b.a.. Second Lieutenant,
Infantry, U. S. A. Barracks
Covimanding Company A
Frederick J. Moran. Second Lieutenant,
Infantry, U. S. A. Barracks
Commanding Company B
ANNUAL REGISTER X3
Administrative Officers of the Faculty
James Arnold Blaisdkij,, d.d. President's Rooms, Library
President
Edwin Clarence Norton, ph.d. Room 3, Holmes Hall
Dean of the Faculty
Grace Ella Berry, m.a. Sumner Hall
Dean of Women
Milton Erastcs Churchill, litt.d. Room 53, Library
Secretary of the Faculty
Frank Parkhurst Brackett, m.a. The Observatory
Director of the Observatory
Mendal Garbutt Frampton. m.a. Rooms 7 and 8, Holmes Hall
Acting Registrar
Victor Edward Marriott, m.a. Library
Librarian
Homer Elmer Robbins, ph.d. Room 10, Holmes Hall
Chairman of Com^mittee on Admission
Marion Jeanette Ewing, b.a., b.s. Library
Assistant Librarian
Florence Marie Fox Room 6, Holmes Hall
Assistant Registrar and Assistant Secretary of the Faculty
Robert James Bernard, b.a. President's Rooms, Library
Assistant to the President
Virginia Dearborn, b.a. President's Rooms, Library
Secretary to the Administration
Portia Bell President's Rooms, Library
Secretary to the Administration
14 POMONA COLLEGE
Other Officers
Erxest Everett Jones, b.s. 136 E. Ninth St.
Business Manager
Mary Louise Billings 541 Harvard Ave
Accountant
Sarah Louise Jewell Sumner Hall
Matron of Sumner Hall
Gretchen Higbee 319 W. Sixth St.
Assistant to the Business Manager
Dorothy Neely Pratt, b.a. 739 College Ave.
Assistant in the Library
Prances Ten Eyck Pomona
Assistant to the Chairman of Committee on Admission
Forest Glenn Hutchison
Fifth St. and Cucamonga Ave. Ontario
Superintendent of Grounds
Carl Mauritz Carlson 922 Columbia Ave.
Superintendent of Buildings
ANNUAL REGISTER 15
Committees of the Faculty
With Place and Time of Meeting
Buildings and Grounds — (In conjunction with a committee
of the Board of Trustees) — Messrs. Stearns, Hitchcock, Belcher.
Room 51. On call.
Admission — Messrs. Bobbins, Frampton, Miss Berry. Room
10. On call.
Classification — Messrs. Frampton, Brackett, Sumner, Miss
Berry, Messrs. J. A. Lj-man, Bobbins. Room 7. 10:30 a. m.,
Thursday.
College Life — Messrs. Norton, Brackett, Sumner, Miss Berry,
Messrs. Churchill, Ewer, R. H. Lyman, Ro'jbins, Nixon, Ament,
Misses Pasmore, Spear. Room 3, 1:30 p. m., Thursday.
Courses of Sttidy — Messrs. Sumner, Frampton, Hilton, Jones,
Westergaard. Room 14. 10:30 a. m., Tuesday.
Educational Efficiency — Messrs. Brackett, Hitchcock, J. A.
Lyman, Frampton, Neely, Coolej', Marriott, Ament. Room 51.
11 a. m. Thursday.
Faculty Meetings — Miss Berry, Messrs. Bissell, Marriott
Sumner Hall. 8:30 p. m., Monday.
Federated Clubs — Messrs. Jones, Brackett, Bissell, Hilton.
On call.
Graduate Work — Messrs. J. A. Lyman, Bissell, Hitchcock,
Belcher. Room 30. On call.
Library — Miss Spalding, Messrs. Marriott, Stoughton, West-
ergaard, Burgess, Miss Ewing. Library office. On call.
Physical Education — Messrs. Russell, Stoughton, Schott,
Nixon, Miss Spear. Room 2. 10:30 a. m., Tuesday.
16 POMONA COLLEGE
Publications — Messrs. Churchill, Hilton, Anient. Room 53,
On call.
Public Events and Lectures — Messrs. Churchill, R. H.
Lyman, Allen, Schott, with Business Manager Jones. Room 53,
On call.
Religious Interests — Messrs. Marriott, Stearns, Robbins,
Miss Ewing, Mr. Bernard. Library office. On call.
Rooms — Messrs. Sumner, Churchill, Nixon. Room 14. On
call.
Rules — Mr. Nixon, Miss Berry, Messrs. Churchill, Frampton.
Room 9. On call.
Student Aid and Labor — Messrs. Robbins, Marriott, Miss
Berry, Room 9, On call.
Summer School— Messrs. Bissell, Hilton, Russell. On call.
ANNUAL REGISTER
17
STUDENTS
The register of students is made up at the beginning of the
second semester.
Names are listed in accordance with the standing at the
opening of the college year, except that (1) those advanced
students who during the first semester have removed all de-
ficiencies as well as completed the hours and credits required
for the semester are given the rating thus earned, and (2)
those who having attended but two semesters have earned
at least 32 hours and 28 credits are ranked as Sophomores.
Sophomores and Freshmen are divided into two groups,
matriculate and non-matriculate students. Matriculate students
have met all entrance requirements and have carried their
college work with success; non-matriculate students have
failed to meet one or both of these requirements.
The standing of students enrolled for less than one semester
is provisional.
GRADUATE STUDENTS
Barbara Sanford Allen Claremont
B. A., Pomona College
Delia Churchill Claremont
B. A., Pomona College
Lucile Hanson Ada, Minn.
B. A., Carleton College
Marjorie Dayton Hitchcock Van Nuys
B. A., Pomona College
Magoichi Kobayashi Yokohama, Japan
B. C, Waseda University
Paul Lichti Claremont
B. A., Pomona College
Dorothy Neely Pratt Claremont
B. A., Pomona College
Florence Dodge Russell Claremont
B. A., Pomona College
18 POMONA COLLEGE
SENIOR CLASS
Vida Keziah Abrahams Downey
Russell Thurber Adams' Monrovia
Hollis Partridge Allen' Pasade na
Edythe Nettie Backus Monrovia
Marion Augusta Ballantyne El Cajon
Ruth Jeannette Bartlett La Verne
Dorotha Harriet Benham Pomona
Allen Carrier Blaisdell' Claremont
Mary Amanda Boardman Claremont
Reva Mildred Cartwright Santa Ana
Katherine Goldie Chace Wayne, Neb.
Homer Campbell Chaney Pomona
Gladwyn Murray Childs Los Angeles
Roy Kenneth Cole Whittier
Ruth Mary CoUings Claremont
Helen Genevieve Corwin Highland
Mabel Elizabeth Coy Pasadena
Arline Davis Orange
Charles Corbin Devalon Pomona
Charles Sephen Dewey Whittier
George Burritt Dunham Redlands
Eileen Belle Edmondson Downey
Edith May Evans Pasadena
Henson Whitlock Faris Ontario
Alice Dorothy Freeman Upland
Ira Nobles Frisbee ( S. A. T. C. ) Ontario
Margaret Gaylord Claremont
Ella Anna Gemmell Claremont
Vernita Louise Gordy Pasadena
Walter Lowrie Grow' Highland
Grace Winifred Hamilton Claremont
Esther Viora Hess Upland
Lloita Higbee Claremont
Grace Elizabeth Hoskins Claremont
Vincent Leeds Humeston' Bisbee, Ariz.
Helen Kathleen Jacobs Julian
Olga Margaret Johnson Fullerton
Hazel Verne Jones Ontario
Agnes Louise Leonard . . : Los Angeles
Phyllis Arlene Lord Riverside
'Owing to the war emergency the exact status cannot be deter-
mined at this time.
ANNUAL REGISTER 19
Helena Bruce Mackenzie Pomona
Eva Catherine .AlcCarthy Santa Paula
Gertrude Beatrice McKinley Long Beach
Shirley Isabel Meacham Pasadena
Leonora Louise Miles Ramona
Edith Mitchell San Dimas
Kenneth Frederick Morgan (S. A. T. C.) Pomona
Henry Marvin Morrison' Santa Ana
Kenneth Royal Murdoch Chino
Elsie May Myers Claremont
Florence Newman Chino
Helen Marie Nielson Pasadena
Alan Ogbourne' Claremont
Edwin Robert Parker' Long Beach
Isabel Margaret Parker FuUerton
Maurice Amandus Perry' Orange
Houston Peterson ( S. A. T. C. ) Los Angeles
Stanley Welch Plummer ( S. A. T. C. ) Monrovia
Margaret Clinton Pooley Riverside
Catherine Johnson Rich , Claremont
Genevieve Agnes Rimpau Los Angeles
Margaret Winifred Robertson Santa Ana
Esther Frances Romick Claremont
I one Ella Ross Pomona
Elizabeth Mills Scranton Riverside
Gweneth Manila Seaver Pomona
Helen Sheets. .; Claremont
Lucile Belmont Simmons • Los Angeles
Anness McCutchen Sloss La Mesa
Eradlord Bixi:y Smith (S. A. T. C. ) Claremont
Sophie Seymour Stearns Claremont
Lillian Frances Street Claremont
Wallace Tate Riverside
Helen Cecelia Thorbecke Jerome, Ariz.
Marian Towt Lindsay
Marguerite Caroline Waite Hemet
Ruth Bernice Walton Delta, Utah
Arthur Maurice Williams Houston, Texas
Ruth Gladys Williams La Verne
Esther Louise Williams Pasadena
Emanuel Paul Young' Claremont
'Owing to the war emergency the exact status cannot be deter-
mined at this time.
20 I'OMONA COLLEGE
JUNIOR CLASS
Clifford Backstrand Riverside
Juditli Bldridge Barcus . Pomona
Mildred Elinor Barnes Chula Vista
Laura Bonnie Batlt in Long Beach
Herman Stanley Bergstrom' El Monte
Margaret Otis Blake Santa Ana
Horatio Abbey Borders (S. A. T, C.) Chicago, 111.
Katherine Bowen Des Moines, Iowa
Florence Lorene Breckenridge Santa Ana
Helen Louise Campbell Pomona
Susie Pauline Case Claremont
Edwin Chambers' Redlands
Jeannette Chaney Pomona
Geoffrey Chu Chen KiangSu, China
Anna Marie Chuml Santa Ana
Pearl Frances Clark Worland, Wyo.
Mabel Lee Cloyd Yuma, Ariz,
Merrel Dare Clubb Pomona
William Henry Cooke Kaukaua, Wis.
Dorothy Dola Decker Pomona
William Warren Elliott' Whittier
Madeline Enman Riverside
Susie Robertina Erwin El Monte
Clara Belle Fox San Diego
Mary Apolline Fritz Pomona
Harold Dewey Gardner' Claremont
Helen Margaret Hamilton Pasadena
Robert Daniel Harwood Claremont
Gertrude Bouldin Hoar Azusa
Hall Gillam Holder ( S. A. T. C. ) Santee
Lova Holt Anaheim
Gladys Howard Phoenix, Ariz.
Mildred Howe Long Beach
Helen Margaret Iredell Long Beach
Gertrude Edith Jennings Redlands
Clark Johnson San Diego
Gertrude Fern Jones Whittier
James McMillan Judy' Claremont
Robert Parsons Judy' Claremont
Mary Louise Kendall San Diego
'Owing to the war emergency the exact status cannot be deter-
mined at this time.
ANNUAL REGISTER 21
Hazel Gleaves Kimbell Riverside
Nellie Kimble Hanford
Dorothy Madolyn Kincell Riverside
Katherine Gray Laidlaw Ontario
Mary Ethel Lawrence Claremont
Franklin Lee Tungchow, China
Helen Geneva Leopold Claremont
Evelyn May Lorbeer Claremont
Mary Ethel Lyman Claremonl
Helen Mary Mather Rivera
Clyde Richard McQuiston^ . .Rialto
Wortha Joy Merritt Claremont
Douglas Montgomery Pasadena
Helena Vivian IVlorrison Hollywood
Edison Orr' Dillon, Mont.
James Kinsey Peirsol ( S. A. T. C. ) Claremont
Elizabeth Pell. Claremont
Madeleine Pellet Ferraud, France
George Caldwell Pooley' Riverside
Edris Powlison Riverside
Allen Iredell Pretzman (S. A. T. C.) Columbus, O.
EfRe Maria Ransom Pomona
Grace Evangeline Rensch Pasadena
Rhea Francisca Rimpau Hollywood
Floy Louise Robinson Dinuba
Concha Romero Chihuahua, Mex.
Grace Elizabeth St. Clair La Verne
Alice Marie Salvan St. Jean d'Angely, France
Gerald Emmons Sanford ( S. A. T. C. ) Claremont
Katherine Pauline Sargent Claremont
Arthur Shaffer Chino
Gratia Sharp Santa Ana
Ada Allene Shepard Compton
Mary Marjorie Smith La Verne
Kathleen Lillian Spooner Patterson
Loyd Victor Steere ( S. A. T. C. ) Los Angeles
Willard Edward Stokes^ Phoenix, Ariz.
Estelle Louise Vandruff Huntington Beach
Edward Jacob Wenig' Pomona
Nelson David Widmer' Upland
Carol Harriet Willisf ord Glendale
^Owing- to the war emergency the exact status cannot be deter-
mined at this time.
22 POMONA COLLEGE
Alfreda Delight Wright Guadalajara, Mex,
Marion Leland Wyman (S. A. T. C.) Claremont
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Ruth Elizabeth Ashton San Diego
Margaret Averbeck Pomona
Margaret Baker Monrovia
Eda Marie Beatty Covina
Victor Hugo Beniof f ( S. A. T. C. ) Claremont
Ruth Manerva Bennett Hollywood
Marjorie Rowena Bentley Claremont
Mildred Genevieve Berry Covina
Maud Esther Bird Santa Ana
Victor Edwin Bird * . Deadwood, S. D.
Ruth Estelle Brant Riverside
Muriel Ruth Brenner Pomona
Bessie May Brock Pomona
Arthur Milton Butcher Rialto
Arthur Shackleton Campbell Upland
Marion Elizabeth Campbell Ontario
Caroline Prescott Canby San Fernando
Lutie Lavinia Carpenter Claremont
Pao Tai Chang Shanghai, China
Millicent Mitchell Childs Los Angeles
Lillian Sneath Coleman Pasadena
Mary Garnett Conley Ontario
William Cooper ( S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Mary Kloss Daggs Claremont
Meh-yuin Dziao Nanking, China
Elmer Newton Eddy ( S. A. T. C. ) Mojave
Edyth Elizabeth Ernst Claremont
Ruth Ewald Claremont
Buena Vista Ferrell Hemet
Lois Hunt Field Claremont
Gertrude Edna Final Long Beach
Dorothy Elizabeth Findlay Pomona
Florence Gertrude Force Claremont
Lillian May Fox San Diego
Wayne Bailey Gardner (S. A. T. C. ) Claremont
Anna Bertha Gillen Claremont
Harriett Lavinia Glazier Los Angeles
Cornelia Elma Goertz Mountain Lake, Minn.
Anna Vera Good , Fullerton
Virginia Judson Gregory Whittier
ANNUAL UEGISTER 23
Howard Frederick Guthery Marion, O.
Afton Miriam Hanson Ada, Minn.
Isabel Ellen Henry Long Beach
Jewel Dorothy Hickox Santa Ana
Margaret Hill ' La Mesa
Helen Hoffman Long Beach
Janet Love Hohl Ontario
Constance Marguerite Hoover El Centro
Ada Marie Hoy Santa Ana
Helen Dale Jennings^ Redlands
Edith Jewell San Dimas
Clive White Johnson (S. A. T. C.) . Pomona
Miriam Elizabeth Kalb Monrovia
Gertrude Maude Kent Prescott, Ariz.
Araxie Martha Keoseyan Selma
Mary Margaret King Prescott, Ariz.
Ruth Hazel Kirkland Long Beach
Zelma Langdon Ontario
Doris Dann Leopold Claremont
Alice Louise Love Pomona
Katharine Mahaffey Redlands
Olive Caroline Marsh Los Angeles
John Sedberry Marshall Fullerton
Lucile Matthews Covina
Marion Thomasine Mattison Long Beach
LaSalle Almeron Maynard Claremont
Geneva Fanny McConnell Claremont
Christine Karen Miller Newport Beach
Esther Ruth Miller Los Angeles
Fern Elizabeth Miller Lakeside
Mildred Adele Milliken Claremont
Torrance Raymond Moreman ( S. A. T. C. ) Upland
Edward Winfield Morrison (S. A. T. C. ) Los Angeles
Mary Abigail Neister Pomona
Paul Olmstead Pomona
James Roland Ovington Pomona
Howard Painter ( S. A. T. C. ) Los Angeles
Mildred Bertha Palmer Claremont
Bettie Barcus Patton Orange
Madge Peirsol Claremont
Hazel Potter Covina
Helen Powell Highland
Alberto Rembao Mexico
Ethel Martha Rice Hanf ord
John Winchester Rich (S. A. T. C.) Claremont
24 POMONA COLLEGE
Melvin Clay Rich ( S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Theresa Marian Robinson Claremont
Ruth Verena Schroeder Santa Ana
Paul Francis Shafer , . . .Los Angeles
Travis Shelton ' Long Beach
Mary Helen Sterrett Lindsay
Rachel Nita Stillwell South Pasadena
Lena Spake Sturdevant Pasadena
Marie Sweet Riverside
Vincent Joseph Thacker ( S. A. T. C.) Phoenix, Ariz.
Margaret Octavia Thompson Alhambra
Newton Edward Thompson (S. A. T. C.) Alhambra
Jessie Virtue Long Beach
Albert Vollmer San Diego
Albert Clarke Walker Collbran, Colo.
Nita Lorraine Walton Orange
Mattie Welsh Anaheim
Leslie Allen Wheeler ( S. A. T. C. ) Holtville
Lula Elsie White Rivera
Mildred Josephine Wight Eagle Rock
Hortense Elizabeth Wrockloff Pomona
Miles Dewey Allen (S. A. T. C.) Claremont
Hobart Alter ( S. A. T. C. ) Ontario
Harold Abbott Bartlett (S. A. T. C.) Pomona
Berry Gold Bayley Riverside
Harrie Harlan Bleeeker (S. A. T. C.) . Sierra Madre
Constance Conger Buf f ington Ontario
Pauline Frances Cairns* Los Angeles
Joseph Alexander Caldwell (S. A. T. C.) Claremont
Leonard Jackson Colbern (S. A. T. C. ) Salesville, Mont.
Edward Bonaparte Covington Santa Ana
Raymond Bridgman Cowles Claremont
Robert Crabtree ( S. A. T. C. ) Los Angeles
Elwyn Breckenridge Crosswhite Riverside
Edward William Doll Claremont
Harold Bailard Franklin Carpinteria
Richard Karl Gandy Coronado
Mary Gardner Claremont
Harold Carlton Goodale (S. A. T. C. ) Anaheim
Harry Stuart Goodwin (S. A. T. C.) Pomona
Robert Marvin Greathouse Santa Ana
*New students entering second semester.
ANNUAL REGISTER 25
Willard Clare Griffith Upland
Marion Ware Grothe* Wayne, Neb.
Edgar Hargrave ( S. A. T. C. ) Yorba Linda
Inis Hutton Hubbard Hanford
Young Kang Claremont
Eugene LeBaron Brawley
Robert Ross Leishnian (S. A. T. C.) Caspar
Herbert Daniel McCarthy (S. A. T. C.) Santa Paula
John Enright Mclnerny San Dimas
Donald Charles Meadows' Orange
Lillus Katherine Middagh Walnut
Dorothy IMoles Claremont
Parke Crowder Oliver (S. A. T. C.) Claremont
Marion Adella Patterson Banning
Earle Kinne Powers ( S. A. T. C.) Claremont
Rex Ragan' El Centro
Aaron Rutherford ( S. A. T. C. ) Claremont
Chauncey Burt Sheldon (S. A. T. C.) La Verne
Walton Roland Smith ( S. A. T. C. ) Monrovia
Joy Stanford San Diego
Clarence Theodore Stover (S. A. T.C.) Claremont
Felton Ezra Taylor* Claremont
Earle Clarence Thomas Upland
Blanche Dee Towne Gardena
George Glenwood Trout ( S. A. T. C. ) Burbank
Arthur Robert Tyler ( S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Charles Albert Vaile (S. A. T. C.) Claremont
Ruth Margaret Vandevert Claremont
Chauncey Wallace Voorhies (S. A. T. C. ) Glendora
Maude Smith Walton Claremont
Eleanor Gleason Warner Long Beach
Hilda Helen Wedel** Hollywood
Clinton Herbert Wells (S. A. T. C.) _. . .Hollywood
Stuart Gladstone Wheeler (S. A. T. C.) Claremont
Theda Melverne White Chino
William Brown Worden (S. A. T. C.) Hollywood
^Owing to the war emergency the exact status cannot be deter-
mined at this time.
*New students entering- second semester.
**New^ students entering second quaiter.
26 POMONA COLLEGE
FRESHMAN CLASS
Donald Charles Adams Pomona
Elizabeth Lytle Allen Pasadena
George Derwood Baker (S. A. T. C.) Glendora
Maudie Lee Beatty Covina
Beatrice Mae Biles Claremont
Mary Edna Blake Santa Ana
Eleanor Headley Bowen Claremont
Evelyn Ford Brown Covina
Flora Burton Pomona
Dorothy Louise Butler Little Rock, Ark.
Maria Stanley Caldwell Alhambra
Marjorie Adele Carver Los Angeles
Macy Maynard Chambers Pasadena
Edith Palmer Cockley Los Angeles
Helen Grace Coleman Pasadena
Ruth Connett Seeley
Charles Clark Cooper (S. A. T. C.) Claremont
Karl Darlington Alhambra
Donald DeWitt La Verne
Opal Mae Doege Long Beach
Dorothy Dye Charter Oak
Elizabeth Eakin Claremont
Dwight Lester Eckert (S. A. T. C.) Orange Cove
Mary Zelma Eells Cloverdale
Marjorie Adele Emerson San Jacinto
Elvin Conrad Erickson (S. A. T. C.) Needles
Dorothy Ellen Fink Burgettstown, Pa.
Mable Mildred Gait Claremont
Myron Milice Gardner Riverside
Frederic Garrett Garrison Claremont
Velma Don Gates South Pasadena
Felma George Pomona
Winifred Alice Geberding Hollywood
Marjorie Luella Gleason Corona
Alzena Esther Graham Chicago, 111.
Doris Grout Riverside
Dorris Maye Haag Hanford
Lillian Hagopian Dinuba
Robertine Hall Los Angeles
Warren Hawley ( S. A. T. C. ) San Diego
Ruth Mary Herner Claremont
Ruth Garnet Hickox Santa Ana
ANNUAL REGISTER 27
John Jacob Hill (S. A. T. C.) Pomona
Margaret Louise Hill Hollywood
Wilma Charlotte Hohlfelder Cleveland, O.
James Edwin Hollingsworth ( S. A. T. C. ) Hemet
Daniel Woody Hollingsworth Hemet
DeForrest Home Los Angeles
Beecher Hungerford ( S. A. T. C.) Upland
RJar.on Hunie San Diego
Helen Emily Hunt Pasadena
Elizabeth Evangeline Hymer Pomona
Isabel Myrtle Ingram Peking, China
Dorothy Bernice Kasten Kenilworth, 111.
Margaret Augusta Kayser Covina
Elizabeth Loring Keyes Claremont
Florence Helen King Hemet
Deskie Rachel Lewis San Jose
Harwood Leon Marshall Douglas, Wyo.
David Marcum Maynard ( S. A. T. C. ) Claremont
Mina McCroskey Pomona
Evelyn Lena Miller Pasadena
Wallace Jenks Miller ( S. A. T. C. ) Los Angeles
Phoebe Elizabeth Moi'gans . : Pasadena
Margaret Pearl Morrison Compton
Estelle Katharine Xeedham El Centro
Maude Elva Oakes Colton
Alfred John Oakey ( S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Marjorie Marie Oliver Claremont
Mary Moseley Peet Covina
Helen Augusta Pell Claremont
Paul Henry Pfeiffer ( S. A. T. C.) Pomona
Adelaide Louise Phillips Pomona
Dorothy Pierce Pomona
Lois Maywood Poeton Claremont
Mary Elizabeth Poeton Claremont
Alice Marie Pratt Escondido
Mary Martha Pringle Twin Falls, Ida.
Charles Arthur Reeves (S. A. T. C.) Pomona
Helen May Reynolds Burbank
Arta Mahalie Rogers Santa Monica
Vera Mayme Rogers South Pasadena
Nelson Aultman Ross ( S. A. T. C. ) Hollywood
Paul Archelaus Russell (S. A. T. C.) Claremont
Clarence William Saltonstall (S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Mary Ethel Schroll Ashton, Ida.
28 POMONA COLLEGE
Zenzaburo Sekine Fukushima, Japan
Gladj's Shepard Compton
Jessie Rebecca Shepard Glendale
Charlotte Esther Sherman Los Angeles
Leslie Eileen Sherman Los Angeles
Auleana Sibley Visalia
Edna Earle Sigrist Rivera
Esperance Slykhous Pomona
Amy Esther Smith La Verne
Elizabeth Smith Garden Grove
Marion Bell Smith Farmington, N. M.
Doris Snodgrass Covina
Alta Phyllis Stephens Lindsay
Florence May Stewart Bath, S. D.
Helen Gertrude Stewart Santa Barbara
Donald Filer Stone ( S. A. T. C. ) Ramona
Alonzo Englebert Taylor Washington, D. C
Florence Belle Taylor Covina
Helen Katheryn Taylor Etna Green, Ind.
Reba. Taylor Claremont
Mary Temple Covina
Marion Sarah Vary Pomona
William Kirk Vernon ( S. A. T. C. ) Upland
Julia Marea Wagner Claremont
Margaret Walton Claremont
Wallace Plummer Weirick ( S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Isabella Whinery Pomona
Helen Frances Young Pomona
George Amberson** Pomona
Harris Anderson ( S. A. T. C. ) El Centre
Kathryn Elizabeth Avery** Fresno
Donald Burge Ayres (S. A. T. C.) Hollywood
Leland Milton Backstrand (S. A. T. C.) Riverside
Virgil Leroy Bates ( S A. T. C.) Ontario
Clifton Coulton Beatty (S. A. T. C. ) Arrowhead Springs
Ben Stroud Beery (S. A. T. C.) Stockton
Virginia May Bell Santa Ana
Albert Oliver Best ( S A. T. C.) Keeler
George Henry Betzsold (S. A. T. C.) Anaheim
Mary Kathryne Benyon Los Angeles
Bernice Marie Black Redlands
*New students entering second quarter.
ANNUAL REGISTER 29
Marjorie Croscombe Black Twin Falls, Ida.
Frank Edwards Blauvelt ( S. A. T. C. ) Pasadena
Richard Lee Bonner ( S. A. T. C. ) Azusa
Arthur Boone (S A. T. C.) Upland
Merritt Talbot Burdg (S. A. T. C.) Whittier
Hartley Caldwell Chino
Mildred Edith Carpenter Redlands
Isaac Barton Caprelian ( S. A. T. C.) Clovis
George Vincent Casey (S. A. T. C.) Brawley
Genevieve Ambler Chandler* Long Beach
James Harold Cloer ( S A. T. C. ) Porterville
Wesley John Cole ( S. A. T. C. ) Upland
Paul Wesley Crawford ( S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Maurice Delos Curtis ( S. A. T. C. ) El Monte
Roberta Dawes** Santa Ana
Glen DeGarmo ( S A. T. C. ) El Monte
Gerald Compton Denebrink (S. A. T. C.) Claremont
Frank Desmond ( S. A. T. C. ) Hollywood
Ross Hull Dinsmoor ( S. A. T. C.) El Monte
William Hayes Dowling (S A. T. C.) Anaheim
Glen Holmes Dysinger (S. A. T. C.) Fullerton
Paul Emerson Engle (S. A. T. C.) Upland
Hilda Marie Englehart* Brawley
Christena Mary Fear Prado
Raylene Fellows** Pomona
Cyrus Bruce Flick ( S. A. T. C. ) San Diego
Kenneth Bradshaw Forbes (S. A. T. C. ) Claremont
Beth Luella Fox San Diego
Gilbert Edward Fritz (S. A. T. C. ) National City
Erles Eugene Fuller ( S. A. T. C. ) Ontario
Myron Knapp Gallup (S. A. T. C.) Pomona
Anna Sue German Hynes
Gerald Stokes Gillingham (S. A. T. C. ) Compton
Ralph Herbert Goodale (S. A. T. C. ) Anaheim
Cosette Graham Stroud, Okla.
John Jacob Hader ( S. A. T. C. ) Los Angeles
William Hall* San Diego
Adelaide Frances Hamilton* Corona
Levi Norton Harris ( S. A. T. C. ) Monrovia
William Lawrence Hester (S. A. T. C.) Visalia
Eliot Fang Ho Changsha, China
*New students entering second semester.
**New students entering second quarter.
30 POMONA COLLEGE
Florence Marjorie Holder Santee
George Milton Hollingsworth (S. A. T. C.) Whittier
James Duncan Hopkins (S. A. T. C.) Fresno
Charlie Raymond Huffman ( S. A. T. C.) Escondido
Raymond Warren Jacobs (S. A. T. C.) Julian
Leland Johns (S. A. T. C.) Coronado
Evert Franklin Johnson (S. A. T. C.) Rivera
Harriett Ellen Johnson North Pomona
Laura Belle Johnson* Chappell, Neb.
Harold Hemenway Jones (S. A. T. C. ) Tulare
John Thomas Jones (S. A. T. C. ) Lake Crystal, Minn.
Thomas Brodie Jones Hollywood
Edith Josephine Jordan Claremont
Robert Winfield Jordan ( S. A. T. C. ) Lindsay
Lloyd Shepherd Kelsey (S. A. T. C.) Oxnard
Alexander Clarence Krrn'^ll (P. A. T. C.) El Centre
Edwin Frederick Kjellburg (S. A. T. C.) Riverside
William Henry Lawrence ( S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Stanley Richard Leavall ( S. A. T. C. ) Madera
Nita Ruth Legg** .* Woodland
Charles Wendell Lehr ( S. A. T. C. ) Fresno
Clifton Levo ( S. A. T. C. ) Whittier
Letha Gertrude Little Calexico
John Raymond Livengood (S. A. T. C.) Santa Monica
Ruth Winnifred Long Gardena
Harvey Bentley Love (S. A. T. C.) Oceanside
Olive Louise Lundy Palo Alto
Dorothy MacDonald Glendora
John R. C. Mann (S. A. T. C.) Ontario
Walter Martin Oceanside
Glenford Ellsworth Mathews ( S. A. T. C.) Thermal
Frances Viola Maxson Covina
Edward John Mayer (S. A. T. C.) Los Angeles
Edith Lucile Mayhew* ; Coalinga
Robert McCann Claremont
Harold McCkllan (S. A. T. C.) Pomona
Alvin Cecil McCoy (S. A. T. C.) Huntington Beach
Oscar Shaw McDowell (S. A. T. C.) Strathmore
Wilma Ardis Mclnnes Hollywood
Kenneth Stewart McLennan ( S. A. T. C. ) Monrovia
Ruth Harriet McMillan Lake Benton, Minn.
*New students entering second semester.
**New students entering second quarter.
ANNUAL REGISTER 31
Ada Marie Mead Claremont
Elmer Elsworth Mecham Pomona
Charles Hart Merrill Oceanside
Walter Wells Mickle (S. A. T. C.) Anaheim
Cecil Kepner Middagh ( S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Dial Miles (S. A. T. C.) Reedley
Gladys Miller Pomona
Francis Vernon Mitchell Santa Ana
Edith Caroline Moon Oxnard
Jean Freeman Moore Natick, Mass.
Theodore Douglas Moyle (S. A. T. C.) Pasadena
Archie Nisbet ( S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Josephine Harding Oakford Long Beach
Harold Starkey Olson (S. A. T. C.) Pomona
Jo Robert Paden ( S. A. T. C.) Puente
Dean Fullerton Palmer ( S. A. T. C. ) Upland
Fred Louis Palmer Claremont
George Mark Papazian (S. A. T. C.) Fresno
Belden Murray Parker (S. A. T. C.) Orange
Charles Andrus Parsons Ojai
Louise McPhurson Parsons Hollywood
Frank Adrian Payne (S. A. T. C.) Los Angeles
Leonard Payne ( S. A. T. C.) Chino
Morris Blanchard Pendleton Los Angeles
Beatrice Bowles Pike Los Angeles
Lorraine Beatrice Pine Chino
Herbert Popenoe ( S. A. T. C. ) Pasadena
Hal Wolverton Powell ( S. A. T. C. ) Highland
Keith Eon Powlison (S. A. T. C.) Riverside
Earnest Edward Preston (S. A. T. C.) Fresno
Irving Thomas Quarton (S. A. T. C.) Anaheim
William Robert Reynolds Santa Monica
Vera Lorraine Righetta Claremont
Louis Alfred Russell (S. A. T. C.) Endeavor, Wis.
Wilma Caroline Saylor Redlands
Roscoe Russell Schaffert (S. A. T. C.) Orange
Victor Clarence Schmeltz (S. A. T. C. ) Escondido
Alfred Arthur Schwichtenberg (S. A. T. C.) Pomona
Peter Malcolm Sefer ( S. A. T. C. ) Fresno
Phillip Kirk Sellew ( S. A. T. C.) La Jolla
Courtney Miller Shaw (S. A. T. C.) Claremont
Victor Henry Simank (S. A. T. C.) Pasadena
Heloise Sloan El Monte
Harold Grove Smith (S. A. T. C.) National City
32 POMONA COLLEGE
Howard Emerson Spicer (S. A. T. C.) Upland
Robert Lee Stanton ( S. A. T. C. ) Puente
Edward Starr ( S. A. T. C. ) Long Beach
Henry Charles Stokes (S. A. T. C. ) Phoenix, Ariz.
Hudson Theodore Stokes (S. A. T. C.) Pomona
Walter Richard Stokes (S. A. T. C.) Phoenix, Ariz.
Julius Frederick Stone Columbus O.
Charles Arka Storm (S. A. T. C.) Long Beach
Walter Asa Story ( S. A. T. C. ) Burbank
Nettie Laura Sturges Claremont
Roy Herbert Summers** Colton
Donald Mynard Swarthout ( S. A. T. C. ) Highland
Arden Lewis Taylor ( S. A. T. C. ) Santa Ana
Charles Test Taylor (S. A. T. C.) San Bernardino
Ned Charles Taylor (S. A. T. C.) Bourbon, Ind.
William Clarence Thedaker (S. A. T. C.) Burbank
Frank Thomas ( S. A. T. C.) Long Beach
Clifford Henry Thompson (S. A. T. C.) Mauston, Wis.
Ruth Chapin Thomson Claremont
Alice Louise Tinkham Claremont
Lloyd Boyer Tocher ( S. A. T. C. ) Fresno
Aram Torosian (S. A. T. C.) Kingsburg
John Harvey Turk (S.A. T. C.) Long Beach
Craig Hamilton Violette (S. A. T. C.) Riverside
Carl Egmont Volkmer (S. A. T. C Santa Monica
Mary Genevieve Walker San Dimas
Vera Gladys Walsh Blythe
Fred Lynn Weaver Pasadena
Irene Kairelani Wells Kaiku, T. H.
Clarence White ( S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Oscar Stanford Whetstine ( S. A. T. C. ) Pasadena
Stella Elizabeth Whiting Upland
Evan Coates Williams (S. A. T. C.) Santa Monica
Margaret Curry Williams Santa Barbara
Thomas Archibald Wood (S. A. T. C.) Whittier
Sylvia Parker Woollett .• .- Hollywood
SPECIALS
Lelia Ackerman (Secretarial) Claremont
Ralph Preston Anderson (S. A. T. C.) Azusa
Charles Henry Ash ( S. A. T. C. ) Pasadena
Jesse Kilbourn Atwater (S. A. T. C.) Riverside
**New students entering- second quarter.
ANNUAL REGISTER 33
Gordon Bell (S. A. T. C.) Glendora
Ruth Rosamond Bell ( Music ) Ontario
Paul Dawkins Bentley (Law ) ClaremonL
Ira Boone ( S. A. T. C. ) Upland
Rudolf Francis Brunner (S. A. T. C.) Santa Monica
Luella Rambo Bucher ( English ) Pomona
George Latham Clarke (S. A. T. C.) Glendora
Leslie Madison Clarke ( S. A. T. C.) Sawtelle
Kenneth McKinley Claypool ( S. A. T. C. ) Orange
Walter Benjamin Collins (S. A. T. C.) El Centro
Fritz Jacob Cramer ( S. A. T. C. ) San Diego
Bates Sidney Dewey ( S. A. T. C. ) Orange
Wellington Dallas Dillinger (S. A. T. C.) San Diego
Minor Hinman Drigger (S. A. T. C.) Heber
Wilbur Sheldon Easley (S. A. T. C.) Glendora
Edward Karl Emerzian ( S. A. T. C. ) Fresno
Evangeline Margaret Fanton (Art) San Diego
Leo John Fogel ( S. A. T. C. ) Santa Monica
Forrest Lowell Gantz (S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Hobart Wesley Gunsolus (S. A. T. C. ) Riverside
Roger Walter Haglund ( S. A. T. C.) Riverside
Clarence Henry Hamer ( S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Harold Whitney Hart (S. A. T. C. ) Lamanda Park
Edith Dykstra Hartley ( Secretarial) Claremont
Harold Henry Heckman (S. A. T. C. ) Long Beach
Forrest Henry Hieatt ( S. A. T. C. ) San Diego
Elmer Ellis Holmes ( S. A. T. C. ) Exeter
Chester Hugo Holt (S. A. T. C. ) Claremont
Gilbert Waldo Kingman (S. A. T. C.) Chula Vista
Ethel S. Lyman (Modern Language) Claremont
Rupert George Malone ( S. A. T. C. ) Burbank
Charles Ray Mason ( S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Rodman Lucias Mason ( S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Noble Earl Mcllvain ( S. A. T. C. ) Pasadena
George Alexander McKenna (S. A. T. C. and
Zoology ) Claremont
John Wilbur McLaughlin (S. A. T. C.) Lamanda Park
Dewitt Robin Menefee ( S. A. T. C. ) Ojai
Bruce Lester Moore ( S. A. T. C.) Upland
Robert Harold Navarre (S. A. T. C.) Lindsay
Lucia Hull Neely (English) Claremont
Forrest Roldyn Nelson (S. A. T. C. ) El Cajon
Frederick Arthur Offer (S. A. T. C.) Coeur d'Alene, Ida.
Grace Douglass Orr (Modern Language) Claremont
34 POMONA COLLEGE
Van Pitts ( S. A. T. C. ) South Pasadena
Herbert Edward Poole (S. A. T. C.) San Bernardino
Howard Gervaise Purcell (S. A. T. C. ) Pasadena
Floyd Moore Ransdell (S. A. T. C.) Santa Paula
Carl Leroy Read ( S. A. T. C. ) Chino
Lillian Bird Rich (Science) Claremont
Ara Riley ( S. A. T. C. ) San Diego
Eula Blanche Ripley (Music) Twin Falls, Ida.
Eugene Wilson Ross (S. A. T. C.) Hollywood
Kenneth Saunders (S. A. T. C.) Sierra Madre
Ehrle Raymond Schaad (S. A. T. C.) Los Angeles
Paul Merle Schaefer (S. A. T. C.) Upland
Margaret Lucie Scharle (Secretarial) Claremont
Catherine Stephenson Scott (Secretarial) Claremont
Alfred Whiting Sears (S. A. T. C.) El Centro
Sibley Sellew ( S. A. T. C. ) La Jolla
Mildred Julia Shafer (Music) Pomona
Helen Weir Shanks ( Music) Pomona
Melvin Sikes ( S. A. T. C. ) Upland
Olga Marie Skratass (Music) Minot. S. D.
Willard Ainsworth Steere ( S. A. T. C.) Pomona
Harry Day Steward (S. A. T. C.) Los Angeles
G. C. Ting (Science) Chekiang, China
John Theodore Ware (S A. T. C. ) Ontario
Roy Phillip Warner ( S. A. T. C. ) Hollywood
Archie Alexander Washburn (S. A. T. C.) Azusa
Maynard Williams (S. A. T. C.) Lindsay
Stanley Wilton ( S. A. T. C. ) Pomona
Louise Wrockloff (Music) Pomona
Gilbert Harold Zauft (S. A. T. C.) Long Beach
SUMMARY
Graduates 8
Seniors 82
Juniors SO •
Sophomores 163
Freshmen 291
Specials 77
Total 701
ANNUAL REGISTER 35
DEGREES. HONORS AND PRIZES
Degrees Conferred in 1918
MASTER OF ARTS
Pro Honoris Causa
Hugh Gibson Washington, D. C.
IN ENGLISH LITERATURE
Benjamin Hall Van Dyke La Verne
B. A., Colorado College
BACHELOR OP ARTS
Sutnma Cum Laude
Agnes Leek Claremont
Magna Cum Laude
Mary Faye Beaty* Paso Robles
Helen Laura Cowles Claremont
Mary Ailing Davies Los Angeles
Eleanor Allen Lee Claremont
Phebe Shelden Ventura
Cum Laude
June Andrews Rigby, Ida.
Rodney Fremont Atsatt* Los Angeles
Ruth Benson Orange
Frederick Sumner Brackett* . Claremont
William Thomas Melvin Cook Chino
Ruth Utt Darsie Claremont
Virginia Dearborn Riverside
Alma Celia Evans Pomona
William Lawrence Gantz Pomona
Clara Belle Gilbert Pomona
Robert Morrison Hager Claremont
Estelle Hamilton Claremont
Marjorie Dayton Hitchcock Van Nuys
Ida Marion Jenkins Ontario
Ruth Alma Ledig Alta Loma
Harriet Lucile Mather Rivera
Grace Gray Miller Pomona
Marcia Clarice Spear* Monrovia
Rose Waldron Los Angeles
Elwyn Haskell Welch Pomona
Madge Wire Chino
♦Graduated February, 1918.
36 POMONA COLLEGE
Rite
Edmond Raymond Adkinson Santa Ana
Mabel Josephine Allen Claremont
Esther Ba''er Pomona
Mary Broughton Bell Claremont
Bernhardt Louis Bergstrom* El Monte
Doris Margaret Carver Los Angeles
Clarence Cooper* Pomona
Philip Sheridan Banner Pasadena
Marafred Carolyn Durant Claremont
William Lloyd Fletcher San Fernando
Judith Margaret Garrison Claremont
Mabel Gladvs Girton Orange
Winifred McPherson Goodrich Portland, Ore.
Irene Emily Hall Pomona
Agnes Ida Hammond i Covina
Ethelyn Hampton Corona
Lowell John Howe Chula Vista
Ruth Winthrop Humphrey Claremont
Eva May Hyde Claremont
Charlotte Mary Johnson North Pomona
Margaret May Jones Whittier
Shinsaku Katayama Marugame, Japan
Lola Kreighbaum Fullerton
Irene Leek Claremont
Charlotte Elizabeth McGee Pasadena
Ruby Vera Mehl Upland
Geneva Evadne Miller Pasadena
Mary Miller Ontario
Ruth Olmstead Pomona
Joy Lorene Peck Pomona
Margaret Pendergast Carpinteria
Carroll Morris Powers Minneapolis, Minn.
Vera Rebecca Ranney Fullerton
Eleanor Sargent Claremont
Margaret Louise Siddall South Pasadena
Clifford Frank Smith La Verne
Edna Anne Spalding* Strevell, Ida.
Gertrude Agnes Urton Pasadena
Evelyn Weirick Pomona
Clayton Earl Wells Saginaw, Mich.
Edwin Pascal Whitney Claremont
Cecile Woods Beverly Hills
♦Graduated February, 1918.
ANNUAL REGISTER S7
Honors Awarded in 1917-1918
HIGH HONORS'
Names of students who averaged two or more credits per hour
taken and who did not fall below "B" grade in any course.
SENIOR CLASS
Rodney Fremont Atsatt I
Mary Faye Beaty I
Frederick Sumner Brackett 1
Helen Laura Cowles II
Ruth Utt Darsie II
Mary Ailing Davies I*, II
Virginia Dearborn I, II
Robert Morrison Hager I, II
Eleanor Allen Lee I*, II
Agnes Leek I*, II
Harriet Lucile Mather I
Phebe Sheldon II*
Margaret Louise Siddall II*
Madge Wire II
JUNIOR CLASS
Mary Amanda Boardman II*
Mary Ruth Collings I, II
Helen Genevieve Corwin II
Henson Whitlock Faris I
Alice Dorothy Freeman I, It
Hazel Verne Jones I, II
Edith Mitchell II
Isabel Margaret Parker II
Elizabeth Mills Scranton I, II
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Margaret Otis Blake I, II
Geoffrey Chu Chen II
Merrel Dare Clubb I, II
^In the assignment of honors the work in Physical Education is
disregarded except that all honoj- students must be maintaining
at least a B grade in that subject.
♦Registered for less than 15 hours but more than 12.
38 POMONA COLLEGE
Alice May Fesler II
Belle Amanda Fesler II
Fern Gertrude Hawkins II
Edna Amanda Hull I
Gertrude Edith Jennings I, II
Helen Geneva Leopold II
Wortha Joy Merritt, I, II
Effie Marie Ransom I
Estelle Elizabeth St. Clair I, II
Estelle Louise Vandruff II
Carol Harriet Willisford I
FRESHMAN CLASS
Robert Vaughn Edwards II
Mary Ellen Freyer I, II
Joanna Margaret Goodnow II
Helen Dale Jennings I, II
Mary Margaret King I, II
Andrew Kitaru Kita I
Doris Dann Leopold II
Geneva Fanny McConnell II
GENERAL HONORS
Names of students who earned within at least three of
twice as many credits as hours taken and who did not fall be-
low "B" grade in any course.
SENIOR CLASS
June Andrews II
Helen Laura Cowles I*
Alma Celia Evans I*, II
Clara Belle Gilbert I, II
Estelle Hamilton I
Agnes Ida Hammond I, II*
Eva May Hyde II*
Ruth Anna Ledig II*
Harriet Lucile Mather II
Grace Gray Miller II**
Vera Rebecca Ranney II*
♦Registered for less than 15 Jiours but more than 12.
**Reglstered for 9i^ hours.
ANNUAL REGISTER 39
JUNIOR CLASS
Marion Augusta Ballantyne I
Allen Carrier Blaisdell II
Mary Amanda Boardman I*
Gladys Merle Bragg I
Gladwyn Murray Childs II
Arline Davis I, II*
Margaret Gaylord I, II
Helen Kathleen Jacobs I, II
Olga Margaret Johnson I, II
Shirley Isabell Meacham II
Kenneth Royal Murdoch II
Isabel Margaret Parker I
Maurice Perry I
Esther Louise Williams II
Ruth Gladys Williams I
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Helen Louise Campbell I
Frances Marie Carter II
Alice May Fesler I
Mary Apolline Fritz II
Ella Alma Gemmell II
Fern Gertrude Hawkins I*
Lloita Higbee II
Gertrude Bouldin Hoar I, II
Mary Louise Kendall I, II
Mary Ethel Lawrence II
Helen Geneva Leopold I
Mary Ethel Lyman I, II*
Effle Marie Ransom II
Grace Evangeline Rensch I, II
Concha Romero I, II
FRESHMAN CLASS
Victor Hugo Benioff I
Ruth Estelle Brant I
Muriel Ruth Brenner I, II
Marion Elizabeth Campbell II
Caroline Prescott Canby I*, II
Robert Vaughn Edwards I
"Registered for less than 15 hours but more than 12.
POMONA COLLEGE
Ruth Ewald I
Alta Elizabeth Fesler II
Joanne Margaret Goodnow I
Margaret Hill I
Ruth Hazel Kirkland I
Zelma Langdon II
Doris Dan Leopold I
Katharine Mahaffey II
John Sedberry Marshall I
Geneva Fanny McConnell I
Esther Ruth Miller II
Gertrude Caryl Olds II
Alberto Rembao I*, II
Elizabeth Schroeter I*
Margaret Julia Todd I, II
Jessie Hardy Virtue I
Hortense Elizabeth Wrockloff I
SPECIAL DEPARTMENTAL HONORS
Names of students who attained "AA" grade in at least
one course, and who did not fall below "B" grade in any other
course.
SENIOR CLASS
Rodney Fremont Atsatt Military Drill
Military Science
Mary Faye Beaty Economics D27
English C7
Physiology D5
Frederick Sumner Brackett Mathematics D27
Helen Laura Cowles Art B12
Ruth Utt Darsie Botany B22
Mary Ailing Davies Spanish C23, C24
Spanish C23', C24'
Virginia Dearborn Spanish D25, D26
Spanish D28
Clara Belle Gilbert Spanish D28
Robert Morrison Hager Philosophy C25
Irene Hall History D27
Eleanor Allen Lee Economics D27
♦Registered for less than 15 hours but more than 12.
ANNUAL REGISTER
41
Agnes Leek
Harriet Lucile Mather
Mary Miller
Phebe Sheldon
Margaret Siddall
Elwyn Haskell Welch
Edwin Pascal Whitney
Madge Wire
French DIO
French D7', D8'
Mathematics D27,
Physiology B3
Philosophy C25
Economics D30
Philosophy D28
Psychology D14
Law C3
Physiology D5
Astronomy D6
Law C3
Psychology D14
D18
JUNIOR CLASS
Marion Augusta Ballantyne
Allen Carrier Blaisdell
Mary Amanda Boardman
Mary Ruth CoUings
Helen Genevieve Corwin
Arline Davis
Henson Whitlock Faris
Alice Dorothy Freeman
Margaret Gaylord
Helen Kathleen Jacobs
Olga Margaret Johnson
Hazel Verne Jones
Edith Mitchell
Isabel Margaret Parker
Elizabeth Mills Scranton
Anness McCutchen Sloss
Esther Louise Williams
Ruth Gladys Williams
Economics C25
Graphics Al, A2
Graphics A2
Psychology C8, Bl
Law B2
English Dll
Botany D30
Art Bll, B12
Philosophy C25
Bible Al, A2
Spanish B21, B22
Psychology Bl
French Al
Economics B21
French Al, A2
English D16
English CIO
English A36
English C41, D42
Philosophy C26
Voice
Psychology C8
German A13, B14
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Margaret Otis Blake
Geoffrey Chu Chen
Spanish B21, B22
History D4
Psychology C4
42
POMONA COLLEGE
Merrel Dare Clubb
Nannette Dauner
Belle Amanda Fesler
Ella Anna Gemmell
Gertrude Bouldin Hoar
Gertrude Edith Jennings
Mary Ethel Lawrence
Helen Geneva Leopold
Wortha Joy Merritt
EfRe Marie Ransom
lone Ross
Estelle Louise Vandruff
Carol Harriet Willisford
English CIO
Greek B4
History A17, A18
Latin C7, C8
Psychology B3, C4
Psychology Bl
Physiology B4
Physiology B4
French Al, A2
German B3, B4
Chemistry B36
Economics B2
Psychology B2
French A2
Mathematics A2
Economics C28
Physiology Al
English A36
Biology A2
English A36
Psychology Bl
FRESHMAN CLASS
Victor Hugo Benioff
Mildred Genevieve Berry
Lucile White Bird
Millicent Childs
Mabel Katherine Dula
Robert Vaughn Edwards
Mary Ellen Freyer
Joanna Margaret Goodnow
Edith May Hoffmaster
Helen Dale Jennings
Mary Margaret King
Ruth Hazel Kirkland
Andrew Kitaru Kita
Doris Dan Leopold
Olive Caroline Marsh
John Sedberry Marshall
Astronomy Bl, C2
Physiology Al, A2
Physiology A2
Chemistry B36
Organ
Physiology A2
German C9', CIO'
Mathematics Al
English A22
French C4
Biology A2
German B3, B4
French A2
Music Al
Physiology Al
History B13
Biology A2
English A22
Physiology Al
ANNUAL REGISTlCll 43
Geneva Fanny McConnell Mathematics A9
Zoology B18
Mildred Palmer Music Al
Alberto Rembao Bible A2
Spanish D26
Elizabeth Schroeter English Al
Travis Shelton Physiology A2
Prizes Awarded 1917-1918
THE HOME ORATORICAL CONTEST PRIZES
ira Nobles Frisbee, Ontario
Robert Vaughan Edwards, Pocatello, Ida.
THE WOMEX'S ORATORICAL CONTEST PRIZES
Concha Romero, Chihuahua, Mexico
Isabel Margaret Parker, Fullerton
THE VAILE PRIZES
(Not Given)
THE LORBEER PRIZES
(Not Given)
THE MONCRIEFF PRIZE IN ASTRONOMY
Victor Hugo Benioff, Claremont
THE DOLE DEBATE PRIZES
(Not Given)
THE LLEWELLYN BIXBY MATHEMATICS PRIZE
(Not Given)
THE MUDGE LATIN PRIZE
Margaret Gaylord, Claremont
Hazel Verne Jones, Ontario
THE KINNEY DECLAMATION PRIZES
Zelma Langdon, Ontario
Raymond Moreman, Ontario
THE HAGER MISSIONARY PRIZES
(Not Given)
Qeiuc U ^l*^o . Hi^
Pomona College
ANNUAL REGISTER
1919-1920
CLAREMONT
CALIFORNIA
POMONA COLLEGE BULLETIN
PUBLISHED BI-MONTHLY BY POMONA COLLEGE
Entered at the Postoffice at Claremont, CaL, as second-class matter
Vol. XVII MARCH, 1920 No. 2
THIRTY-SECOND YEAR
omona College
ANNUAL REGISTER
of the officers, teachers and
students of Pomona College for
the year 1919-1920 : : :
March 1920
CLAREMONT, CALIFORNIA
Published by the College
'^^Ml-rv'i^N* G^llft^
CALENDAR
1920
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COLLEGE CALENDAR
1920
Registration Days for Second Se-
mester.
February 9, Monday
February 10, Tuesday
February 11, Wednesday Second Semester begins, 7:30 a. m.
February 22, Sunday
March //. Thursday
March 21, Saturday
April o, Monday
May 30. Sunday
June 11, Friday
to
June n, Thursday
June 21, Monday
Washington's Birthday.
Matriculation Day.
Spring Recess begins, 12:00 m.
Spring Recess ends, 10:30 a. m.
Memorial Day.
Final Examinations
Commencement.
Summer Vacation
September 20, Monday ) Registration Days. Monday and
September 21. Tuesday )■ Tuesday, examinations for en-
September 22, Wednesday \ trance
September 22, Wednesday Convocation, 10:30 a. m.
POMONA COLLEGE
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
George W. Marston, President San Diego
Rt. Rev. Joseph H. Johnson, d.d., Vice-President Los Angeles
Rev. Charles B. Sumner, ll.d. Secretary Claremont
Charles E. Walker, Treasurer Los Angeles
Term of Office Expires, June, 1920
Donald G. Aplin Highland
Llewellyn Bixby Long Beach
Eli p. Clark Los Angeles
WiNFRED E. Garrison, ph.d. Claremont
William F. Holt Van Nuys
George W. Marston San Diego
Term of Office Expires, June, 1921
Rev. Frank M. Dowling Anaheim
James S. Edwards Redlands
Rt. Rev. Joseph H. Johnson, d.d. Los Angeles
Frederick W. Lyman Pasadena
Arthur J. McFadden Irvine
Butler A. Woodford Claremont
Term of Office Expires, June, 1922
Rev. Raymond C. Brooks, d.d. Berkeley
Edwin F. Hahn Pasadena
Stephen H. Herrick Riverside
Seeley W. Mudd Los Angeles
Rev. William O. Wark Pomona
Term of Office Expires, June, 1923
Charles E. Walker
Rev. William Horace Day, d.d.
Arthur M. Dole
Rev. Henry Kingman, d.d.
William S. Mason
Dell A. Schweitzer
Los Angeles
Bridgeport, Conn.
Pomona
Claremont
Evanston, 111.
Los Angeles
Term of Office Expires, June, 1924
James A. Blaisdell, d.d., Claremont
Charles E. Harwood, ll.d. Upland
Frank H. Harwood San Dimas
Rev. Charles B. Sumner, ll.d. Claremont
W. H. R. Weldon
Fred M. Wilcox
Ernest E. Jones, Business Manager
South Pasadena
Lamanda Park
Claremont
ANNITAL REGISTER
Committees of the Board
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
James A. Blaisoell, Chairman
Charles B. Sumker, Secretary
Arthur M. Dole Charles E. Harwood
Edwin F. Hahx Charles E. Walker
Butler A. Woodford
COMMITTEE ON INVESTMENTS
Charles E. Walker George W. Marston
Eli p. Clark Fred M. Wilcox
Ernest E. Jones, Business Manager
COMMITTEE ON WAYS AND MEANS
Frederick W. Lyman Eli P. Clark
Joseph H. Johnson Stephen H. Herrick
James A. Blaisdell Henry Kingman
William F. Holt William S. Mason
Seeley W. Mudd
COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION
James A. Blaisdell Frank M. Bowling
Llewellyn Bixby Winfred E. Garrison
Edwin F. Hahn
COMMITTEE ON BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS'
Charles B. Sumner George W. Marston
William S. Mason
COMMITTEE ON NOMINATIONS
Joseph H. Johnson Arthur M. Dole
James A. Blaisdell
James P. Jamiesox . , ■> ^
T-, TT r\ > Architects
Robert H. Orr \
'In conjunction with a Committee of the Faculty.
POMONA COLLEGE
FACULTY
James Arnold Blaisdell, m.a., d.d. 345 College Ave.
President
Cyrus Graxdison Baldwin, d.d. Palo Alto
President Emeritus
Edwin Clarence Norton, ph.d., d.d. 137 W. Seventh St.
Dean of the Faculty and Professor of the Greek Language and
Literature on the Edwin Clarence Islorton Foundation
Frank ParkhurstBrackett, m.a. 270 E. Third St.
Professor of Mathematics on the Frank Parkhurst Brackett
Foundation and Director of the Observatory
Phebe Estelle Spalding, ph.d. 261 W. Fifth St.
Professor of English Literature on the Phebe Estelle
Spalding Foundation
Daniel Herbert Colcord, m.a. 157 E. Seventh St.
Professor of the Latin Language and Literature
Arthur Dart Bissell\ m.a. 319 Harvard Ave.
Professor of German
George Gale Hitchcock, b.a. 721 College Ave.
Professor of Physics
George Stedman Sumner, ph.d. 105 College Ave.
Professor of Economics and Sociology on the Stedman-
Sumner Foundation
Charles Cummings Stearns, m.a. 146 E. Tenth St.
Professor of Biblical History and Literature on the Nancy
M. Lyon Foundation
ANN'UAL REGISTER 7
Grace Ella Berry, m.a. Sumner Hall
Dean of Women and Assistant Professor of Mathematics
James Alexander Lymax, pii.d. 833 Indian Hill Blvd.
Professor of Chemistry
Milton Erastus Churchill, litt.d. 507 Yale Ave.
Secretary of the Faculty and Associate Professor of German
Mendal GarbuttFrampton. m.a. 927 Harvard Ave.
Professor of the English Language
Charles Gracchus Neely, b.l. 739 College Ave.
Professor of Constitutional History and Laic
William Atwood Hilton', ph.d. 1264 Dartmouth Ave.
Professor of Zoology on the Willard George Halstead
Foundation
Bernard Capen Ewer. ph.d. 339 Yale Ave.
Professor of Psychology
Ralph Haine Lyman, b.a. 357 W. Tenth St.
Professor of Applied Music and Instructor in Singing.
Head of the Department of Music
Chaiu.e.s Berard Vogdes. ma.jor. U.S.A., retired, Claremont Inn
Professor of Military Science and Tactics
Maro Beath Jones, m.a. 428 Yale Ave.
Professor of Romance Languages
Robert Day Williams, ph.d. 630 Harvard Ave.
Acting Professor of Philosophy
William Polk Russell, m.a. 506 E. Sixth St.
Associate Professor of Mathematics on the Joseph W. Fiske
Foundation
'Absent on leave, first semester, 1919-1920.
8 POMONA COLLEGE
Arthur Volney Stoughton, m.d. 146 W. Seventh St.
Associate Professor of Physiology and Hygiene, and College
Physician
Waldeaiar Christian Westergaard, ph.d. 135 E. Ninth St.
Associate Professor of History on the Warren F. Day
Foundation
Hannah Tempest Jenkins Claremont Inn
Associate Professor of Art and Design
Edward Payson Bartlett, ph.d. 135 E. Ninth St.
Associate Professor of Chemistry
Victor Edward Marriott, m.a. 116 E. Twelfth St.
Libraria7i
Walter Earle Hartley, b.a., b.mus. 127 W. Eighth St.
Associate Professor of Organ and Piano
William Evan Nicholl, m.a. 307 W. Sixth St.
Dean of the College and Assistant Professor of Education
Robert Tresilian Belcher, b.a. - 169 W. Sixth St.
Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Engineering
Walter Alfred Allen, b.a., b.mus. 131 E. Tenth St.
Assistant Professor of Musical Theory and Appreciation, "
and Instructor in Organ
La'.ra Charlton Squire, c.a. 248 W. Seventh St.
Assistant Professor of Physical Education for Women
William Sheffield Ament. m.a. 1130 Harvard Ave.
Assistant Professor of English
William Holland Matlock, ph.b. 642 College Ave.
Assistant Professor of German
ANNUAL REGISTER 9
Homer Elmer Robiuns. ph.d. 487 Harrison Ave
Assistant Professor of Ancient Languages
Carl Peter Schott, b.e,, b.p.e. 725 Harvard Ave.
Assista7it Professor of Physical Education for Men
Eugene White Nixon, b.a. 142 E. Third St.
Assistant Professor of Physical Ti-aining for Men
Philip Alexander Munz, ph.d. Smiley Hall
Assistant Professor of Botany
A.MANDUS ZoELLNER 248 E. Socond St.
Assistant Professor of Violin
George Samuel Burgess, b.a., j.d. Claremont Inn
Assistant Professor of Political Economy
Frank David Thomson, m.a. 338 Harvard Ave.
Assistant Professor of Accounting and Commercial Subjects
Rexford Davis Colburn, b.mus. 346 Yale Ave.
Assistant Professor of Piano
Charles Tabor Fitts. b.a. 131 W. Eighth St.
Assistant Professor of English
Clifford Nott Hand, b.l. 1122 College Ave.
Director of Religious Interests
Reginald Pole. b.a. Los Angeles
Director of Dramatics
Mable Clair West, b.s. 1016 Columbia Ave
Instructor in Piano
Harriet Pasmore, b.a. 132 E. Second St.
Instructor in Singing
10 POMONA COT.LEGE
Alfred Oswald Woodford\ b.a. 639 Yale Ave.
Instructor in Chemistry and Geology
Helen Felicitas Haury, b.a. 272 W. Seventh St.
Instructor in Chemistry
Marjorie Dayton Hitchcock, b.a. 157 W. Seventh St.
Instructor in English
Flore.nx'e Dodge Russell, b.a. 362 Mills Ave.
Instructor in Piano
Winifred McPherson Goodrich, b.a. 407 Harvard Ave.
Instructor in Physical Education for Women
Margaret Gaylord, b.a. 325 W. Sixth St.
Instructor in Romance Languages
Katherine M. Heacox. b.a. W. Fourth St.
Instructor in Romance Languages
Alma Mozelle Anderson, b.a. Claremont Inn
Instructor in Romance Languages
^Absent on leave, 1919-1920.
AXXl'Al. Ul'XnSTEft
k
Lecturers
JOSEPH H. JOHNSON FOUNDATION
EowAKi) Caldwell Moore, ph.d., d.d. Cambridge, Mass.
Parkmaii Professor of Theology and Plummer Professor of
Christian Morals. Harvard University
Harvard Exchange Professor of Philosophy
Ravxiom) C. Bhooks. d.d. Berkeley
HENRY D. PORTER FOUNDATION
Taslka Harada. ll.d.. d.d. Kyoto, Japan
Ex-President of Doshisha University
12 POMONA COLLEGE
Administrative Officers of Faculty
James Arnold Blaisdell. d.d. President's Rooms, Library
Pj-esident
Edwin Clarence Norton, ph.d. Room 3, Holmes Hall
Dean of the Faculty
William Evan Nicholl, m.a. Room 9, Holmes Hall
Dean of the College
Grace Ella Berry, m.a. Sumner Hall
Dean of Women
Milton Erastus Churchill, litt.d. Room 53, Library
Secretary of the Faculty
Frank Parkhurst Brackett, m.a. The Observatory
Director of the Observatory
Mendal Garbutt Frampton, m.a. Rooms 7 and 8, Holmes Hall
Acting Registrar
Victor Edward Marriott, m.a. Library
Librarian
Charles Berard Vogdes, major, u.s.a., retired, Claremout Inn
Commanding Officer Reserve Officers' Training Corps
Homer Elmer Robbins, ph.d. Room 10, Holmes Hall
Chairman of Committee on Admission
Marion Jeanette Ewing, b.a., b.s. Library
Assista7it Librarian
Florence Marie Fox' Room 6, Holmes Hall
Assistant Registrar
Georgia Grace Thomas Room 53, Library
Assistant Secretary of the Faculty
Robert James Bernard, b.a. President's Rooms, Library
Assistatit to the President
Virginia Dearborn, b.a. President's Rooms, Library
Secretary to the Administration
'Resigned Nov. 1, 1919.
ANNl'AI. UEGISTKU 13
Class Officers
General — Professors Brackett and NichoU
Senior — Professors Brackett and Burgess
Junior — Professors Williams and Matlock
Sophomore — Professors Sumner and Squire
Fresh.man— Professors Robbins and Berry
Other Officers
Ernest Everett Jones, b.s. 119 College Ave.
Business Manager
William Jewett Howaku. i:.a. 1131 Harvard Ave.
Assistant Business Manager-
Mary Loltise Billings 541 Harvard Ave
Accountant
Sarah Louise Jewell Sumner Hall
Matron of Sumner Hall
Gretchen Higbee 319 W. Sixth St.
Assistant to the Business Manager
Mrs. Louis D. Hillhouse Smiley Hall
College Hostess
Lois Eleanor Peck 140 Mesa Ave.
Assista)it to the Registrar
Hazel Wheeler 1011 Harvard Ave.
Assistant to the Chairman of Committee on Admission
Forest Glenn Hutchison
Fifth St. and Cucamonga Ave., Ontario
Superintendent of Grounds
Carl Mauritz Carlson 922 Columbia Ave.
Superintendent of Buildings
14 POMONA COLLEGE
Committees of the Faculty
With Place and Time of Meeting
Admission — Messrs. Robbins, Frampton, Miss Berry- Room
10. On call.
BuiUUngs and Grounds — (In conjunction with a committee
of the Board of Trustees) — Messrs. Stearns, Hitchcock,
Belcher. Room 4. On call.
Classification — Messrs. Frampton, Sumner, Miss Berry,
Messrs. Bartlett, Robbins, Nicholl. Room 7. 3:15 p. m., Friday.
College Life^ — Messrs. Norton, Brackett, Miss Berry, Messrs.
Churchill, Ewer, R. H. Lyman, Robbins, Schott, Nicholl,
Burgess, Miss Squire. Room 3. 1:15 p. m., Tuesday.
Courses of Study — Messrs. Sumner, Frampton, Jones, Munz,
Westergaard. Room 14. 10:30 a. m., Tuesday.
Educational Efficiency — Messrs. Brackett, Hitchcock, J. A.
Lyman, Frampton, Marriott, Hartley, Hand, Matlock. Room 51.
1:15 p. m., Friday.
Faculty Meetings — Miss Berry, Messrs. Williams, Marriott.
Sumner Hall. 10:30 a. m., Saturday.
Federated Clubs — Messrs. Jones, Brackett, Nicholl, Hilton.
Room 17. On call.
Graduate Work — Messrs. Bartlett, Williams, Hitchcock
On call.
Library — Miss Spalding, Messrs. Marriott, Stoughton, West-
ergaard, Burgess, Miss Ewing. On call.
Physical EcUication — Messrs. Russell, Stoughton, Schott,
Nixon, Miss Squire, Mr. Ament. Room 2. 10:30 a. m., alter-
nate Thursdays.
Publications — Messrs. Churchill, Thomson, Hilton, Ament,
Bernard. Room 53. On call.
Public Events and Lectures — Messrs. Churchill, R. H.
LjTnan, Allen, Schott, with Business Manager Jones. Room 53.
On call.
Religious Interests — Messrs. Marriott, Neely, Hand, Rob-
bins, Miss Ewing, Mr. Bernard. Room 2. 9:30 a. m., Monday.
Rooms — Messrs. Sumner, Churchill, Nicholl. Room 14. On
call.
Rules — Mr. Nicholl, Miss Berry, Messrs. Churchill, Framp-
ton. Room 9. On call.
Student Aid and Labor — Messrs. Robbins, Marriott, Hand,
Miss Berry. Room 10. On call.
Summer School — Messrs. Russell, Hilton, J. A. Lyman. On
call.
ANNUAL REGISTER 15
STUDENTS
The register of students is made up at tlie beginning of the
second semester.
Names are listed in accordance with the standing at the
opening of the college year, except that (1) those advanced
students who during the first semester have removed all de-
ficiencies as well as completed the hours and credits required
for the semester are given the rating thus earned, and (2)
those who having attended but two semesters have earned
at least 32 hours and 2S credits are ranked as Sophomores.
Sophomores and Freshmen are divided into two groups,
matriculate and non-matriculate students. Matriculate students
have met all entrance requirements and have carried theii
college work with success; non-matriculate students have
failed to meet one or both of these requirements.
The standing of students enrolled for less than one semester
is provisional.
GRADUATE STUDENTS
Harper Wine Frantz Elgin, 111.
B. A., Pomona College
Rena Belle Pine Chino
B. A., Pomona College
16 POMONA COLLEGE
SENIOR CLASS
Clifford Backstrand Riverside
Mary Edna Baker Ojai
Judith Eldridge Barcus Pomona
Mildred Elinor Barnes Chula Vista
Laura Bonnie Batkin Long Beach
William Samuel Belden Alta Loma
Herman Stanley Bergstrom El Monte
Margaret Otis Blake Hayden, Ariz
Florence Lorena Breckenridge Santa Ana
Charles Chester Brisco* Anaheim
Susanna Pauline Case Claremont
Edwin Beattie Chambers Redlands
Jeannette Chaney Pomona
Geoffrey Chu Chen Wusih, KiangSu, China
Anna Marie Chuml Santa Ana
Horace F. Clark Dover, Del.
Heber Hovey Clewett* Pomona
Mabel Lee Cloyd Yuma, Ariz.
Merrel Dare Clubb Pomona
William Henry Cooke Kaukauna, Wis.
Dorothy Dola Decker Pomona
George Burritt Dunham, Jr.* Redlands
Madeline Enman Riverside
Susie Robertina Erwin El Monte
Lowell Maj'nard Frantz La Verne
Mary Apolline Fritz '. Pomona
Archibald Maclay Gardner Whittier
Harold Dewey Gardner Claremont
Allen Smith Grover* San Jacinto
Walter Lowrie Grow Highland
Margaret Helen Hamilton Pasadena
Robert Daniel Harwood Claremont
Gertrude Bouldin Hoar Azusa
Hall Gillam Holder* Santee
Lova Holt Anaheim
Constance Marguerite Hoover El Centro
Gladys Howard Phoenix, Ariz.
Mildred Howe Long Beach
Helen Margaret Iredell Long Beach
Gertrude Edith Jennings Redlands
"Graduated in February
ANNUAL RKGISTER 17
Gertrude Fern Jones Whttier
James McMillan Judy Claremont
Wilbur Elwood Kellum Burnett
Mary Louise Kendall San Diego
Hazel Cleaves Kimbell Riverside
Nellie Kimble Hanford
Dorothy Madolyn Kincell Riverside
Mary Ethel Lawrence Claremont
Franklin C. H. Lee North Tungchow, China
Philip Albert Leighton Covina
Evelyn May Lorbeer Claremont
Mary Ethel Lyman Claremont
Helen Mary Mather Rivera
Lillus Kather-ne Middagh Walnut
Joseph Eldridge Mitchell Pomona
Helena Vivian Morrison Hollywood
Paul Howard Olmstead Pomona
Edison Orr* Dillon, Mont.
Marion Adella Patterson Burnett
James Kinsey Peirsol Claremont
Elizabeth Pell Claremont
Madeline Pellet Clermont, France
George Caldwell Pooley Riverside
Edris Powlison Riverside
Rex Ragan El Centro
Effie Marie Ransom Pomona
Grace Evangeline Rensch Pasadena
Catherine Johnson Rich Claremont
Rhea Francisca Rimpau Hollywood
Floy Lou.'!se Robinson Dinuba
Concha Romero Chihuahua, Mex.
Grace Elizabeth St. Clair La Verne
Gerald Emmons Sanford Claremont
Katherine Sargent Glendalo
Arthur Luther Shaffer Denver, Colo.
Ada Allene Shepard Compton
Mary Marjorie Smith La Verne
Loyd Victor Steere Los Angeles
Willard Edward Stokes Los Angeles
Blanche Dee Towne Gardena
Estelle Louise Vandruff Huntington Beach
William Webster Vannier Sierra Madre
♦Graduated in February.
18 POMONA COLLEGE
Bruce McClain Wallace Claremont
Eleanor Warner Long Beach
Nelson David Widmer Upland
Carol Harriet Willisford Glendale
Alfreda Delight Wright Guadalajara, Mex.
Marion Leland Wyman Claremont
JUNIOR CLASS
Lillian Virginia Asher El Monte
Margaret Averbeck Pomona
Margaret Baker Monrovia
Willard Daniel Ball, Jr Ontario
Eda Marie Beatty Covina
Ruth Manerva Bennett Hollywood
Marjorie Rowena Bentley Claremont
Myrle Borthwick Chino
Muriel Ruth Brenner Pomona
Arthur Shackleton Campbell Upland
Caroline Prescott Canby San Fernando
Lutie Lavina Carpenter Pomona
Millicent Sylvia Childs Los Angeles
Lillian Sneath Coleman Pasadena
Mary Garnet Conley Ontario
William Cooper Claremont
Elwyn Breckenridge Crosswhite Riverside
Mary Kloss Daggs Claremont
Edward William Doll Washington, D. C.
Meh-yuin Dziao Chengtu, China
Elmer Newton Eddy Fellows
Henry Bruce Elliott Whittier
Edyth Elizabeth Ernst Claremont
Ruth Ewald Claremont
Lo's Hunt Field Claremont
Florence Gertrude Force Claremont
Tonan Fukuda Sappora, Japan
Richard Carl Gandy Denver, Colo.
Mary Gardner Claremont
Wayne Bailey Gardner Claremont
Julia Ammon Getz Hollywood
Anna Bertha Gillen Claremont
Georgia Elverda Gillogly Claremont
Harriett Lavinia Glazier Los Angeles
Harry Stuart Goodwin Pomona
ANNUAL REGISTER 19
Clarence Rolland Gray Pomona
Virginia Judson Gregory Whittier
Afton Miriam Hanson Ada, Minn.
Jewell Dorothy Hickcox . .Santa Ana
Ralph Huntington Higby Pomona
Margaret Hill La Mesa
Paul Rossell Holmstrom Pasadena
Ada Marie Hoy ' Santa Ana
Francis Raymond Iredell Long Beach
Helen Dale Jennings Redlands
Edith Jewell ^ San Dimas
Clive White Johnson Pomona
Robert Parsons Judy Claremont
Gertrude Maude Kent . .Jamestown, N. Y.
Mary Margaret King Prescott, Ariz.
Alan Kingman Claremont
Zelma, Langdon Ontario
Simone Lhoumeau Cognac, Chareute, France
Alice Louise Love Pomona
Marguerite Matilda MacLean Avalon
Katharine Mahaffey Redlands
Rosa Bird Marimon Claremont
Sarah Forsythe Mar'mon Claremont
Olive Caroline Marsh Los Angeles
John Sedberry Marshall Fullerton
Marion Thomasine Mattison Long Beach
Geneva Fanny McConnell Claremont
Clyde Richard McQuiston Rialto
Esther Miller Los Angeles
Fern Elizabeth Miller Lakeside
Mildred Adele Milliken Claremont
Dorothy Moles Claremont
Torrance Raymond Moremen Upland
May Estella Morrow Hemet
Adeline Ruth Mueller Hollywood
Mabel Adelaide Myers Anaheim
Parke Crowder Oliver Claremont
Mildred Bertha Palmer Claremont
Bett'.e Barcus Patton Orange
Bradford Lyon Patton Los Angeles
Madge Peirsol Claremont
Helen Powell Highland
Margaret Cunningham Rae Pasadena
Alberto Rembao Valparaiso, Ind.
20 POMONA COLLEGE
John Winchester Rich Claremont
Ruth Verena Schroeder Santa Ana
Paul Francis Shafer Los Angeles
Travis Shelton Long Beach
Paul Ellsworth Simpson Riverside
Florence Hattie Snidow La Verne
Kathleen Lillian Sp9oner Patterson
Felton Ezra Taylor .' Claremont
Margaret Octavia Thompson Alhambra
Newton Edward Thompson Alhambra
Charles Albert Vaile Claremont
Ruth Margaret Vandevert Los Angeles
Albert Vollmer San Diego
William Fremont Wagner Los Angeles
N,:ta Lorraine Walton Orange
Hilda Helen Wedel Newton, Kan.
Mattie Welsh Long Beach
Leslie Allen Wheeler Claremont
Theda Melvene White Chino
William Hartley V/iddess Pomona
Martha Hatch Winslow Hermosa Beach
Hortense Elizabeth Wrockloff Claremont
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Elizabeth Lvtle Allen Pasadena
Jane Arenschield Berkshire, N. Y.
Josephine Sylvia Arland Montesano, Wash.
Kathryn Elizabeth Avery Fresno
George Derwood Baker Glendora
Jacob Bassler Sawtelle
Maudie Lee Beattie Covina
Victor Hugo Benioff Claremont
Muriel Elizabeth Betz Bellevue, Nebr.
Beatrice Mae Biles Claremont
Marjorie Croscombe Black Twin Falls, Ida.
Mary Edwa Blake Hayden, Ariz.
Eleanor Headley Bowen Pomona
Evelyn Ford Brown Covina
Arthur Milton Butcher Pomona
Dorothy Louise Butler Claremont
Pauline Frances Cairns Los Angeles
Maria Stanley Caldwell South Pasadena
Mildred Edith Carpenter Redlands
Marjorie Adele Carver Los Angeles
ANNT\AL REGISTER 21
Dorothy Canfield Case Claremont
Macy Maynard Chambers Pasadena
Genevieve Ambler Chandler Long Beach
Edith Palmer Cockley Hawthorne
Ruth Connett Seeley
Charles Clarke Cooper Claremont
Maurice Delos Curtis El Monte
Karl Darlington Alhambra
Gerald Conipton Denebrink Long Beach
John Donald DeWitt LaVerne
Dorothy Dye Charter Oak
Elizabeth Eakin Claremont
William Warren Elliott' Whittier
Marjorie Adele Emerson Claremont
Elvin Conrad Erickson Escondido
Christena Mary Fear Prado
Beth Luella Fox San Diego
Mable Mildred Gait Peking, China
Frederic Garrett Garr'son Claremont
William LeRoy Garth Beaumont, Tex.
Velma Don Gates South Pasadena
Felma George Pomona
Winifred Alice Gerberding Hollywood
Anna Sue German Hynes
Esther Jane Gillogly Claremont
Marjorie Luella Gleason Corona
Alzena Esther Graham Chicago, 111.
Cosette Ruth Graham Los Angeles
Dorris Maye Haag Hanford
John Jacob Hader Hollywood
Lillian Hagopian Dinuba
Robertine Hall Los Angeles
Adelaide Frances Hamilton Corona
Charles Rupert Hartshorn Holtville
Warren Hawley San Diego
Ruth Mar'e Herner Claremont
Ruth Garnet Hickox Santa Ana
John Jacob Hill Pomona
Margaret Louise Hill Hollywood
Franklin L. Ho Changsha, China
Wilma Charlotte Hohlfelder Eagle Rock
Florence Marjorie Holder Santee
'Not a candidate for a degree.
22 POMONA COLLEGE
James Edwin Hollingsworth Hemet
George DeForrest Home Los Angeles
Becher Hungerford Upland
Marion Hunie Pasadena
Helen Emily Hunt Pasadena
Harold Hemenway Jones Tulare
Edith Josephine Jordan San Pedro
Margaret Augusta Kaiser Covina
Dorothy Bernice Kasten Kenilworth, 111.
Helen Keiser Pomona
Elizabeth Loring Keyes Claremont
Florence Helen King Hemet
Vera Esther Laird Long Beach
John Raymond Livingood Santa Monica
John Warren Loucks Pomona
Anna Magdalen Mangold Pomona
John Mann Ontario
Harwood Leon Marshall Douglas, Wyo.
Frances Viola Maxson Covina
David Macrum Maynard Claremont
Robert McCann Tientsin, China
Mina Clare McCrosky Pomona
Ruth Harriet McMillan Pasadena
Ida Belle Merrill Ontario
Evelyn Lena Miller Pasadena
Roy George Miller Pomona
Wallace Jenks Miller Los Angeles
Edith Caroline Moon Oxnard
Phoebe Elizabeth Morgans Pasadena
Margaret Pearl Morrison .- Compton
Florence Martha Myers Anaheim
Estelle Katharine Needham El Centro
Maude Elva Oakes Colton
Alfred John Oakey Pomona
Helen Marion Ofstad Pasadena
Gertrude Caryl Olds Gardena
Louise Elspeth Oliver Colton
Marjore Marie Oliver Claremont
James Roland Ovington Pomona
George Mark Papazian Fresno
Mary Moseley Peet Covina
Helen Augusta Pell Claremont
Morris Blanchard Pendleton Los Angeles
Walter Wesley Phelps Claremont
ANNUAL REGISTER 23
Adelaide Louise Phillips Pomona
Dorothy Pierce Pomona
lone Poe Ontario
Lois Mavwood Poeton Claremont
Mary Elizabeth Poeton Claremont
Alice Marie Pratt Escondido
Mary Martha Pringle Twin Falls, Ida
Charles Arthur Reeves Pomona
Helen May Reynolds Burbank
William Robert Reynolds Santa Monica
Melvin Clay Rich Pomona
Louise Hughes Richards Claremont
Jeannette Rideout Hemet
Theresa Marian Robinson Upland
Arta Mahala Rogers Santa Monica
Vera Mayme Rogers South Pasadena
Helen Rorick Oceanside
Paul Archelaus Russell Claremont
Mary Ethel Schroll Ashton, Ida.
Gladys Shepard Compton
Jessica Rebecca Shepard Glendale
Charlotte Esther Sherman Los Angeles
Leslie Eileen Sherman Los Angeles
Edna Earle Sigrist Rivera
Esperance Slykhous Pomona
Amy Esther Sm'th LaVerne
Carrie Elizabeth Smith Hemet
Elizabeth Smith Garden Grove
Walton Roland Smith Monrovia
Blake Stanton Los Angeles
Alta Phyllis Stephens Lindsay
Helen Gertrude Stewart Santa Barbara
Janet Stone Upland
Charles Arba Storms Long Beach
Leslie Simonds Storrs Santa Monica
Nettie Laura Sturges Claremont
Marie Sweet' Riverside
Alonzo Englebert Taylor Pomona
Florence Belle Taylor Covina
Reba Taylor Claremont
Mary Temple Covina
Ruth Chapin Thomson Claremont
•Not a candidate for a degree.
24 POMONA COLLEGE
Marion Sarah Vary Los Angeles
Julia Marea Wagner Claremont
Mary Genevieve Walker San Dimas
Vera Gladys Walsh Blythe
Margaret Walton Claremont
Freredick Lynn Weaver Pasadena
Wallace Plummer Weirick Pomona
Irene Kaiulani Wells Haiku, T. H.
Isabella Whinery Claremont
Dorothy Joyce Woodworth San Diego
Helen Frances Young Pomona
LIST TWO
Miles Dewey Allen Claremont
Leland Milton Backstrand Riverside
Berry Gold Bayley Riverside
Rudolf Francis Brunner Santa Monica
Joseph Alexander Caldv^^ell Claremont
George Latham Clarke Glendora
Jessie Shaw^ Coman Fullerton
Edward Bonaparte Covington, Jr Santa Ana
Raymond Bridgman Cowles Natal, S. Africa
Fritz Jacob Cramer San Diego
George Earle Cree Claremont
Muriel Louise Cross Three Rivers, Mich.
Roberta Dawes Santa Ana
Ruth Alice Diven Los Angeles
Minor Hinman Driggers El Centro
Edith Agnes Fair Pomona
Harold Ba'lard Franklin Carpinteria
Bess Forestine Gray Pomona
Robert Marvin Greathouse Santa Ana
Marie Hader Hollywood
William Hall San Diego
Curtis Gerhard Hegland* Minneapolis, Minn.
Inis Hutton Hubbard Los Angeles
Robert Wilson Jones Los Angeles
Young Kang Claremont
Robert Ross Leishman Caspar
Eva Lloyd* Ft. DuChesne, Utah
Dorothy McDonald Glendora
Eva Constance Marshall Arlington, Neb.
*New student entering .second semester.
ANNr.AI. HKGISTER 25
Leta Jane Marshall Arlington, Neb.
Carrie Morton Mather Elizabeth, N. J.
Glenford Ellsworth Mathews Patton
Charles Robert McClain Santa Ana
Harold McClellan Pomona
Ada Marie Mead Claremont
Donald Charles Meadows Orange
Cecil Kepner Middagh Walnut
Gladys Miller Pomona
Jean Freeman Moore Central Falls, R. I.
Frederic Boyd Northrup Long Beach
Josephine Harding Oakford Long Beach
Howard Hunt Pattee Reno, Nev.
Frank Adrian Payne Los Angeles
Keith Eon Powlison Riverside
Earl Kinne Powers Claremont
Dwight Lewthwaite Rawson Tulare
Ara Riley San Diego
Aaron Rutherford Pomona
Wilma Caroline Saylor Redlands
Philip Kirk Sellew St. Johns, Ariz.
Sibley Sellew St. Johns, Ariz.
Heloise Sloan El Monte
Howard Emerson Spicer LTpland
Harry Day Steward Los Angeles
Julius Frederick Stone Columbus, O.
Clarence Theodore Stover Claremont
Earle Clarence Thomas Upland
John Harvey Turk Long Beach
Sidney Silas Uebele Pomona
Chauncey Wallace Voorhies Glendora
Marye Eoline Waters Santa Ana
Charles Russell Weaver Twin Falls, Ida.
William Miles Weldon South Pasadena
Clarence White Pomona
Margaret Curry Williams Santa Barbara
William Worden Hollywood
Margaret Younglove Riverside
FRESHMAN CLASS
Nina Mary Allen San Dimas
Edward White Anderson Anaheim
Gertrude Bogert Anderson Long Beach
Lowell Joseph Arnold El Monte
26 POMONA COLLEGE
Mary Christine Asher El Monte
Florence Barnes Redlands
Harmon Randall Bennett Pomona
Mary Sumner Benson Ukiah
Vilma Benson Orange
Wilma Lucille Bentley Whittier
Ola Ellen Blair Pomona
Caroline Butler Blake Hayden, Ariz.
Frances de Saussure Boone San Bernardino
Harry Percy Bowman Los Angeles
Thelma Leroya Bradley Upland
John Howell Brainard Pasadena
Verdelle Breckenridge Santa Ana
Thela May Brownf El Cajon
Lillian May Burch Owensmouth
Leila Campbell Pasadena
Mary Catherine Campbell Alhambra
Margret Cates Milford, Utah
Mildred Eulalia Chaffee Valparaiso, Ind.
Chang wei Chiu Hunan, China
Joseph Walter Choate Los Angeles
Vincent Booth Claypool Pueblo, Colo.
Atherton Brewer Cliff Whittier
James Earl Coke Ontario
Donald Alfred Cole Whittier
Marjorie Irene Cook Sunnyside, Wash.
Sallie Elizabeth Covington Santa Ana
Elmo Gregory Crabtree, Jr San Diego
Hoyt Raymond Curtis El Monte
Dorothy Elizabeth Danner Pasadena
Louise Dilworth Tonopah, Nev.
Lucille Dilworth Tonopah, Nev.
Truman Bartlett Douglass Tempe, Ariz.
Altha Feme Downing Pasadena
Robert Boynton Dozier Los Angeles
Ruth Elizabeth Durward La Verne
Brainerd Dyer Tacoma, Wash
Dorothy Elizabeth Dykstra Danforth, 111.
Frances Juliette Edwards Hollywood
Paul Emerson Engle Upland
Park Ewart Pomona
Kathryn Martha Fraser Los Angeles
tDeceased
ANNUAL REGISTER 27
Barendina Gardener Claremont
Esther Ulrich Gernert Long Beach
Gerald Stokes Gillingham Conipton
Van Goodwin Bastrop, La.
Gladys Lilian Greaves Northfield, Minn.
Ida Hagen Hemet
Mary Elizabeth Hager Claremont
Margaret Armstrong Hair Maui, T. H.
Channing Ward Hale Claremont
Alice Viola Hansen Claremont
Esther Hardy Los Angeles
Evelyn Heacox Oberlin, O
Helen Margaret Heald San Dimas
Florence Angeline Hensel San Diego
Albert Henry Henson Glendale, Ore.
Ernest Paul Herner Claremont
Ruth Stearns Heron Oakdale
Helen Higby Pomona
Archibald Anderson Hill San Diego
Margery Madeline Hoover Santa Monica
Fred Percy Hoskyn San Bernardino
Donald Howe Long Beach
Mabel Sarah Hulberg Santa Ana
Dorothy Frances Iverson Paso Robles
Marian Alice Jennings Redlands
Eugene Kennedy Pomona
Flora Louise Kerr Los Angeles
Lucille Regina King Covina
Christine Ardith Langdon Ontario
Dorothy Pearl Leezer Burbank
Wesley Glick Leighton Covina
Margaret Evelyn Leonard San Bernardino
Gladys Lee Long Fresno
Caroline Loring La Jolla
Ida Grace Lyman Claremont
John Fred Mangold Pomona
Elizabeth Margaret Marshall El Centro
Blanche Lavina Marston Pomona
George Howe McBurney Pomona
Ralph Eugene McCollum Pomona
Celia Pearl McCullough Orosi
Ruth Josephine McDowell Grand Junction, Colo.
Flora Agnes McFadden Santa Ana
Geneva McHann Covina
28 POMONA COLLEGE
Thelma Irene McMurray Liberty, Nebr.
Harriet Alice McQuilkin Long Beach
John Andrews McQuilkin Long Beach
George Burch Mehlin San Diego
Kate Hainsworth Merrell South Pasadena
Willard Morgan Pomona
Grace Nelson Hemet
Helen Elizabeth Nelson Redlands
Hazel Armetta Newhouse Claremont
Katharine Andrus Newkirk Long Beach
Mildred Marcella Norris Claremonl
Margaret Lillian Ofstad Pasadena
Katherine Mildred Overholtzer Claremont
Doris Elizabeth Packard Claremont
Hester Palmer Mitchell, Neb.
Martha Webb Patterson El Paso, Texas,
Cassius Everett Paul Santa Ana
Helen Elizabeth Peterson Chowchilla
Bertha May Phillips Pasadena
Marian Duncan Pierce Claremont
Arlo David Poe Ontario
Marjorie Post San Bernardino
Mertie Echo Pringle Woodlake
Mabel Emma Ransom Pomona
Lynn Ford Reid Long Beach
Herbert Spencer Rempel Pasadena
Helen Estelle Rice Hanford
Edith Lillian Rich Claremont
Dottie Richards Prescott, Ariz.
Frank Bryant Richardson Monrovia
Irma Wyoma Richardson Redondo Beach
William Verne Rickel Upland
Vera Lorraine Righetta Arroyo Grande
Orlyn Nelson Robertson Santa Ana
Abigail Roblee Riverside
Ruth Rorick Oceanside
Margaret Butler Salinger South Pasadena
William Henry Sawtelle Tucson, Ariz
Beatrice Schwan North Pomona
George Stevenson Sharp Pasadena
Stanley Brumbaugh Shaver Azusa
Anna Sheldon Pomona
Florence Taye Shima Claremont
Elizabeth Siddall South Pasadena
ANNUAL REGISTER 29
Llewellyn Bixby Smith Claremont
Wendell Cornell Stone Wlneville
Anna Ruth Tate El Centro
Arden Lewis Taylor Santa Ana
William Hayden Taylor Eagle Rock
Stanley McKee Thompson Pasadena
Kathleen Elma Traweek Covlna
Vivian Lenora Truelson Hemet
Winifred Louise Trull Glendale
Glenn Edward Vedder Los Angeles
Alice Esther Wagner Claremont
Paul Walker Pomona
Helen Huntington Ward Lancaster
Genevra May Wearne Redlands
Marie Edith Weaver El Monte
Stewart Harrison Webster Los Angeles
Margaret Emily Wheeler Claremont
Helen Frances White Claremont
Clinton Herbert Wilmsen Anaheim
Mary Alice Wilson Hemet
Raymond Richards Wilson Los Angeles
Lillian Winham Salinas
Kenelm Tracy Winslow Pasadena
Aleata Woodward Monrovia
Ruth Mae Zorn San Dimas
LIST TWO
Doris Abbott Riverside
Maryellen Adair San Bernardino
Jean Aitken Prescott. Ariz.
Ray James Andrew El Monte
Roy Mason Andrew El Monte
Frank Leland Andrews Santa Ana
Wanda Marie Backus Monrovia
Emmett Borden Ball Ontario
Evangeline Lucile Banta Los Angeles
Wilbur Barr Whittier
Lucinda Jane Beatty Covina
Martha Ellen Becker Claremont
Katherine Delle Belcher La Verne
Gordon Bell Glendora
Elfreda Marie Biggin Redlands
30 POMONA COLLEGE
Clifford Otto Bishop San Bernardino
Douglas William John Black Redlands
Grace Baxter Blount* Hardin, Mo.
Edward Will Bowman El Cajon
Ernest Bridenbaugh ^ Upland
Clara Louise Brown Orange
Eunice Caneer Los Angeles
Ralph E. Chaney Springfield, Mo.
Roy Walter Chester Los Angeles
Helen Osgood Clark* Claremont
Jule Hubert Coffey San Gabriel
Lawrence Tregurtha Cooper Puente
Harold Crane Clear Lake, la.
Charles Daniel Daggs Claremont
Myrna Margaret Davidson Des Moines, la.
Nellie Millard Davis Chino
Theodosia Anna Davis La Verne
Glenn Arthur Doughty La Verne
Dorothy Drew Dunlap Monrovia
Braven Victor Dyer Tacoma, Wash.
Watson Richard Elwell Minneapolis, Minn.
Gladys Laura Emery Eagle Rock
Elizabeth Fiske Ontario
C. Bruce Flick San Diego
Florence Forsyth Long Beach
Martha Elizabeth Freeman Pasadena
Muriel Atherton Gardiner Eagle Rock
Jephtha Milton Gibbs, .Jr Cananea, Sonora, Mex.
LaRoy Gilbert Oxnard
Bernard Warren Ginsburg Cleveland, O.
Albert Donavon Graves Whittier
Arthur Dewey Greaser Pomona
Dorothy Howell Halleck Orange
Lauren Mertz Handley Upland
William Prewett Haughton Phoenix, Ariz.
Chi-Tsen Hsu* Changsha, China
Eva Belle James Missoula, Mont.
Thora Elizabeth Jessen Pomona
Evert Franklin Johnson Rivera
Harriet Ellen Johnson North Pomona
Leoniece Ackley Johnson Tacoma, Wash.
Doris Lucile Jones Tulare
*New student entering second semester.
ANNUAL REGISTER 31
Emmett Taylor Judy Claremont
Earl Franklin Kitchell Upland
Cecil Lee Lacy Gilbert, Ariz.
Lora Naomi Leist Inglewood
Melville Warner Lippman Los Angeles
Howard Burwell Lorbeer Claremont
Alexander Ramsdell Lucas Upland
Joseph Enell Lussier San Dimas
James Melvin MacRoberts Los Angeles
Ardelia Mannington Covina
Frederick Earl Maurer Dixieland
Marjorie Olive Maxson Covina
Elizabeth Griffith McClain Lakeside
Roland Malcolm Merkel Beaumont
Helen Merrill Spokane
Arthur George Miller Whittier
Anita Mathilde Mueller* Los Angeles
Alice Carmen Olds Gardena
Harold Holmes Patterson Hollywood
Wallace William Phelps Los Angeles
Beatrice Bowles Pike Los Angeles
Robert Sheldon Pike Los Angeles
Hazel May Pottenger* Monrovia
Hal Wolverton Powell Highland
Ruth Olive Purrier Long Beach
Marion Frances Randall Highland
Pedro Rembao San Gabriel
King Richardson* La Grange, 111.
Myrtle Lucile Richardson Glendora
William Wallace Roblee, Jr Riverside
Jack Sherman Rounds Pasadena
Ruth Marie Rowland Puente
Thelma Fay Sartain* Havre, Mont.
Paul Merle Salisbury Schaefer Riverside
Ernest Piercy Schroeder Onarga, 111.
Courtney Shaw Claremont
E. Cecil Stewart Santa Barbara
Irene Stonecypher Covina
Francis Herbert Stutt Redlands
Everett Farrell Taylor* San Dimas
Clio Elson Thomas Pomona
Alice Louise Tinkham Claremont
*New student entering second semester.
32 POMONA COLLEGE
Jesse William Titlow Goldfield, Nev
Frank Troth, Jr Riverside
Dorothy Alberta Vance Los Angeles
Ben Soulard Virden* Oxnard
Harold Elbert Waite Compton
Nannie Davis Walker San Antonio, Tex.
Kenneth Bruce Wallace Anaheim
Janet Ruth Washburn Azusa
Florence Weaver Pasadena
Ralph Chalmer Whitacre Pomona
Joy Mildred Wilcox ; Ontario
Robert Cushman Willis Kirwin, Kan.
Stanley Wilton Pomona
Thomas Archibald Wood Whittier
LaVon James Worden Pomona
Catherine Amanda Worthingham* Los Angeles
Frederick Wright Santa Ana
Keitha Knox MacNish Wyatt Long Beach
SPECIALS
Mary Batten Claremont
James D. Baynham Claremont
Pauline Milnes Boyer , Los Angeles
Mary Butler Upland
Joseph Campbell Ontario
Clara Leonora Eastlake Tokio, Japan
Lois Marie Erickson Boston, Mass.
Estelle Hamilton Claremont
Elizabeth Joe Hancock Colon, Neb.
Edith Dykstra Hartley Claremont
Marie-Louise Hatch El Paso, Tex.
John Jarvis Lawton Newton, Mass.
Agnes Marie Lindanger Los Angeles
Grace Irene Mann Long Beach
Rena Frances Martin Oceanside
Forrest Roldyn Nelson El Cajon
Gertrude Mary Norton Claremont
Valeda Gertrude Norris Claremont
Lillian Bird Rich Claremont
Thelma May Robbins Los Angeles
Catharine Stephenson Scott Claremont
*New student entering second semester.
ANNl\\L RROISTICR :j3
Mabel Ayretta Stanford Claremont
Louise Stover Claremoni
Norman Harrington Taylor Pomona
Constantino Tubilleja Honolulu, T. H.
Marye Grace Utt Claremont
Louise Wrockloff Claremont
SUMMARY
Graduates 2
Seniors 88
Juniors 103
Sophomores .... 226
Freshmen 276
Specials 27
Total 722
34 POMONA COLLEGE
DEGREES, HONORS AND PRIZES
Degrees Conferred in 1919
BACHELOR OF ARTS
Magna Cum Laiide
Alice Dorothy Freeman Upland
Margaret Gaylord Claremont
Hazel Verne Jones Ontario
Elizabeth Mills Scranton Riverside
Cum Laude
Russell Thurber Adams Monrovia
Edythe Nettie Backus Monrovia
Marion Augusta Ballantyne El Cajon
Allen Carrier Blaisdell Claremont
Mary Amanda Boardman Claremont
Homer Campbell Chaney Pomona
Gladwyn Murray Childs Los Angeles
Ruth Mary Collings Claremont
Helen Genevieve Corwin Highland
Charles Stephen Dewey Whittier
Henson Whitlock Faris Ontario
Ira Nobles Frisbee Ontario
Grace Winifred Hamilton Claremont
Lloita Higbee Claremont
Helen Kathleen Jacobs Julian
Olga Margaret Johnson Fullerton
Gertrude Beatrice McKinley Long Beach
Shirley Isabel Meacham Pasadena
Edith Mitchell San Dimas
Kenneth Royal Murdoch Chino
Elsie May Myers Claremont
Alan Osbourne Claremont
Isabel Margaret Parker Fullerton
Maurice Amandus Perry Orange
Houston Peterson Los Angeles
Anness McCutchen Sloss La Mesa
Bradford Bixby Smith Claremont
Sophie Seymour Stearns Claremont
Edmund Parker Stone* Pomona
*Class of 1918. In Service, June 191S
ANNUAL REGISTER 35
Helen Cecilia Thorbecke Jerome, Arizona
Esther Louise Williams Pasadena
Rite
Vida Keziah Abrahams Downey
Hollis Partridge Allen* Pasadena
Ruth Jeannette Bartlett La Verne
Dorotha Harriet Benham Pomona
Reva Mildred Cartwright Santa Ana
Katherine Goldie Chace Wayne, Nebraska
Roy Kenneth Cole Whittier
Arline Davis Orange
Charles Corbin Devalon Pomona
Eileen Belle Edmondson Downey
Edith May Evans Pasadena
Annabelle Norris Frink** Chino
Ella Anna Gemmell Claremont
Vernita Louise Gordy Pasadena
Esther Viora Hess Upland
Grace Elizabeth Hoskins Clareniont
Vincent Leeds Humeston Bisbee, Arizona
Agnes Louise Leonard Los Angeles
Phyllis Arlene Lord Riverside
Helena Bruce Mackenzie Pomona
Eva Catherine McCarthy Santa Paula
Leonora Louise Miles Ramona
Kenneth Frederick Morgan Pomona
Henry Marvin Morrison Santa Ana
Florence Newman Chino
Helen Marie Nielson Pasadena
Edwin Robert Parker Long Beach
Stanley Welch Plummer ' Monrovia
Margaret Clinton Pooley Riverside
Genevieve Agnes Rimpau Los Angeles
Margaret Winifred Robertson Santa Ana
Esther Frances Romick Claremont
Ella lone Ross Pomona
Gweneth Manila Seaver Pomona
Helen Sheets Claremont
Lucile Belmont Simmons Los Angeles
Lillian Frances Street Claremont
Wallace Tate Riverside
*Class of 1918. In Service, June 1918.
**Graduated February 1919
36 POMONA COLLEGE
Marian Towt Lindsay
Marguerite Caroline Waite Hemet
Arthur Maurice Williams Houston, Texas
James Walter Williams, Jr San Diego
Ruth Gladys Williams La Verne
Emanuel Paul Young* Claremont
♦Class of 1918. In Service, June 1918
Honors Awarded in 1918-1919
Second Semester'''
HIGH HONORS
Students who averaged two or more credits per hour
taken and who did not fall below "B" grade in any course.
SENIOR CLASS
Alice Dorothy Freeman
Margaret Gaylord**
Lloita Higbee
Olga Margaret Johnson**
Kenneth Royal Murdock
Elizabeth Mills Scranton
Anness McCutchen Sloss
Sophie Seymour Stearns***
JUNIOR CLASS
Geoffrey Chu Chen
William Harold Clark
Merrel Dare Clubb
William Henry Cooke
Gertrude Bouldin Hoar
Gertrude Edith Jennings
Dorothy Madolyn Kincell
Estelle Louise Vandruff
Carol Harriet Willisford
*On account of war conditions honors were not awarded for the first
semester.
♦♦Registered for less than 15 but more than 12 hours
♦♦♦Registered for less than 12 hours
ANNUAL REGISTER
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Muriel Ruth Brenner
Helen Dale Jennings
Mary Margaret King
Fern Elizabeth Miller
Hilda Helen Wedel
FRESHMAN CLASS
Beth Luella Fox***
Alzena Esther Graham**
Ruth Mary Herner
Maude Elva Oakes
GENERAL HONORS
Students who earned within at least three of twice as
many credits as hours taken and who did not fall below "B"
grade in any course.
SENIOR CLASS
Marion Augusta Ballantyne
Mary Amanda Boardman**
Ruth Mary Collings**
Helen Kathleen Jacobs
Shirlev Isabel Meacham**
Edith Mitchell****
Elsie May ]\Iyers
Isabel Margaret Parker
Bradford Bixby Smith
Esther Louise Williams**
JUNIOR CLASS
Wilbur Elwood Kellum***
Mary Ethel Lawrence
Helen Geneva Leopold
Concha Romero
Alice Marie Salvan
♦♦Registered for less than 15 but more than 12 hours
♦♦♦Registered for less than 12 hours
****Registei'ed for 9^/2 hours
38 POMONA COLLEGE
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Marjorie Bentley**
Marion Elizabeth Campbell
Mary Garnett Conley**
Ruth Hazel Kirkland
Geneva Fanny McConnell
Jessie Hardy Virtue
FRESHMAN CLASS
Kathryn Elizabeth Avery
Karl Darlington
Nita Ruth Legg
Evelyn Lena Miller
Paul Henry Pfeiffer
Keith Eon Powlison
Paul Archelaus Russell
Mary Ethel Schroll
Jessie Rebecca Shepard
Elizabeth Smith
Alonzo Englebert Taylor
SPECIAL DEPARTMENTAL HONORS
Students who attained "AA" grade in at least one course
and who did not fall below "B" grade in any other course.
SENIOR CLASS
Alice Dorothy Freeman French DIO
French D14b
Spanish C23b
Spanish C24b
Margaret Gaylord** French DIO
French D14b
Spanish C23b
Spanish C24b
Maurice Amandus Perry Military Drill
Anness McCutchen Sloss French B3
Voice
Sophie Seymour Stearns*** English D18
"♦Registered for less than 15 but more than 12 hours.
'■♦♦Registered for less than 12 hours
ANNUAL HKGISTER
39
JUNIOR CLASS
William Harold Clark
Merrel Dare Clubb
William Henry Cooke
Gertrude Bouldin Hoar
Dorothy Madolyn Kincell
Estelle Louise Vandruff
Carol Harriet Willisford
Military B13c
English D20
French Alb
Philosophy C24
Piano
French B3b
Spanish D26
Spanish D26
Psychology D6
Economics Bib
Psychology D6
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Muriel Ruth Brenner
Helen Dale Jennings
Edith Jewell
Ruth Hazel Kirkland
Fern Elizabeth Miller
Jessie Hardy Virtue
Hilda Helen Wedel
Mathematics C15b
French Bob
Art B9b
Mathematics B13b
French B3b
Mathematics Clob
Zoology B18
French B3b
Psychology Bl
FRESHMAN CLASS
Beth Luella Fox***
Alzena Esther Graham
Maude Elva Oakes
Paul Archelaus Russell
Nettie Laura Sturges
Margaret Curry Williams
Organ
Bible Alb
French Alb
Bible Alb
Mathematics A2
German B3b
Voice
English A2b
^♦Registered for less than 12 hours
40 POMONA COLLEGE
Prizes Awarded 1918-1919
THE HOME ORATORICAL CONTEST PRIZES
(Not Given)
THE WOMEN'S ORATORICAL CONTEST PRIZES
Concha Romero, Chihuahua, Mexico
Katharine Mahaffey, Redlands
THE VAILE PRIZES
(Not Given)
THE LORBEER PRIZES
Rachel Nita Stillwell, South Pasadena
Alfreda Delight Wright, Guadalajara, Mex.
THE MONCRIEFF PRIZE IN ASTRONOMY
Mary Ethel Lyman, Claremont
THE DOLE DEBATE PRIZES
(Not Given)
THE LLEWELLYN BIXBY MATHEMATICS PRIZE
Fern Elizabeth Miller, Lakeside
THE MUDGE LATIN PRIZE
Alice Dorothy Freeman, Upland
THE KINNEY DECLAMATION PRIZES
Fred Lynn Weaver, Pasadena
DeForrest Home, Los Angeles
THE HAGER MISSIONARY PRIZES
(Not Given)
REMBRANDT CLUB PRIZE
Phyllis Arlene Lord, Riverside
Heckman
BINDERY, INC.
Dound-lb-Ptease*
AUG 04
N. MANCHESTER. INDIANA <K>9ai